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Here's to dreams coming true!Looking for more of the latest headlines on LinkedIn?Experts have confirmed that a 3-stage ballistic missile called "Hwasong-13" appeared in a North Korean military parade in 2012. This suggests the missile"s development began at least 5 years ago.
On Wednesday, the North"s state-run media released a photo suggesting the development of the new type of solid-fuel ballistic missile is underway.
The solid-fuel type could be launched faster than the liquid-fuel rockets that North Korea has been test launching.
North Korea has not officially announced the existence of the "Hwasong-13."
But experts confirmed a plate saying "Hwasong-13" on a 3-stage missile carried on a mobile launcher in a military parade in April 2012. The event was held to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of North Korea"s founder Kim Il Sung.
The missile is also known as KN-08 by the US military. It is thought to be an intercontinental ballistic missile or ICBM.
In a different military parade in 2015, a missile believed to be an advanced version of the KN-08 was also displayed.
The confirmation indicates the North has been working on liquid- and solid-fuel ICBMs simultaneously.每日放送国际新闻网所载文章来源于网络,如果不慎侵犯了您的权益,请联系我们删除! 站长支持:(B) In America the first newspaper appeared in Boston in 1690. Published without permission, it was——精英家教网——
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(B) In America the first newspaper appeared in Boston in 1690. Published without permission, it was immediately banned, and all copies were destroyed. Indeed, it remained forgotten until 1845 when the only surviving example was discovered in the British Library. The first successful newspaper was the Boston News-Letter, begun by John Campbell in 1704. Although it was heavily supported by the government, the experiment was nearly a failure, with the limited number of published newspapers. Two more papers were published in the 1720s, in Philadelphia and New York. Just before the Revolutionary War, some two dozen papers were published in all the colonies, although Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania would remain the centers of American printing for many years. Articles in colonial papers were a major force that affected public opinion in America to be fully independent. When the war ended in 1783 there were forty-three newspapers in print. The newspapers played an active role in the affairs of the new nation. Many more newspapers were started, representing all kinds of political opinions, and America’s newspapers began to take on a central role in national affairs. Growth continued in every state. By 1814 there were 346 newspapers. The price of a year’s worth of newspapers was usually over a full week’s pay for a worker. It had to be paid in full and in advance. This cheap, interesting reading material helped to make almost everyone in America develop the habit of reading, which is now taken for granted. 60. Why was the first newspaper in America stopped from being published? . A. Because it was published without the permission of the government. B. Because only the British Library had the right to publish it. C. Because no one wanted to buy newspapers at that time. D. Because no one in America could read newspapers at that time. 61. Why did the author say Boston News- Letter was a successful newspaper? . A. Because it published a large number of newspapers. B. Because it was immediately accepted by the American people. C. Because it was the first newspaper supported by the government. D. Because never before was one newspaper published. 62. The main force to affect public opinion in America for America’s independence was . A. different kinds of newspapers B. the articles in colonial newspapers C. the appearance of more papers D. the centers of American printing 63. What was the situation for newspapers in America after the war ended in 1783? . A. They were banned just as before. B. It was hard to say how they developed. C. All the people in America bought at least one newspaper. D. It played a more important part in daily life. 【】
题目列表(包括答案和解析)
I began to grow up that winter night when my parents and I were returning from my aunt's house, and my mother said that we might soon be leaving for America. We were on the bus then . I was crying, and some people on the bus were turning around to look at me. I remember that I could not bear the thought of never hearing again the radio program for school children to which I listened every morning. I do not remember myself crying for this reason again. In fact, I think I cried very little when I was saying goodbye to my friends and relatives. When we were leaving I thought about all the places I was going to see-the strange and magical places I had known only from books and pictures. The country I was leaving never to come back was hardly in my head then. The four years that followed taught me the importance of optimism, but the idea did not come to me at once. For the first two years in New York I was really lost-having to study in three schools as a result of family moves. I did not quite know what I was or what I should be. Mother remarried, and things became even more complex for me. Some time passed before my stepfather and I got used to each other. I was often sad, and saw no end to "the hard times". My responsibilities in the family increased a lot since I knew English better than everyone else at home. I wrote letters, filled out forms, translated at interviews with Immigration officers, took my grandparents to the doctor and translated there, and even discussed telephone bills with company representatives. From my experiences I have learned one important rule: almost all common troubles eventually go away! Something good is certain to happen in the end when you do not give up , and just wait a little! I believe that my life will turn out all right, even though it will not be that easy.【小题1】What can we learn about the author from paragraph 4?A.She worked as a translator.B.She attended a lot of job interviews.C.She paid telephone bills for her family.D.She helped her family with her English.【小题2】The author believes that _________________ .A.her future will be free from troublesB.it is difficult to learn to become patientC.there are more good things than bad thingsD.good things will happen if one keeps trying【小题3】What is the best title of the passage?A, how I turn to be optimistic&&&&&&&&&&&&B. I am leaving for AmericaC. my life in America&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&D. the importance of optimism
【小题1】A clone is an organism which is genetically i__________(同一的) to another one. 【小题2】 During the war, Germany o________(占领) many countries.【小题3】 At one point, military commanders thought about a__________(放弃) the operation.【小题4】 When he first arrived in the U.S, Yao was an i_________ hit among basketball fans nationwide.【小题5】 In America, the development of social skills is c____________(认为) as important as the development of intellectual skills.【小题6】 Would you please say something about the h__________(精彩生活) of your senior year?【小题7】 The chair was i________ (打算) for you, but she took it away.【小题8】All the people in the world are looking forward to building a better society in h________(和谐) with nature.【小题9】I thought she had retire, but a__________(显然) she hasn’t.【小题10】She was strongly r______________(推荐) for the post.
One of the best-known American writers of children's books is Alfred Strong, or Doctor Strong, as he is better known to readers everywhere. Now, an art show called "Doctor Strong From Then to Now" is travelling around the United States. The pictures and drawings show the history of Doctor Strong.  Doctor Strong first became famous almost fifty years ago when his first children's book was published. Since then, he has written forty-five books that have sold more than one hundred million copies around the world.  Doctor Strong's books are known for their easy use of words and colorful, hand-drawn pictures. These drawings bring life to his imaginary creatures. The Cat in the Hat, Horton the Elephant, The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, and hundreds of others.  The San Diego Museum, in California, organized the art show. It included about three hundred Doctor Strong's original(最早的) drawings and some of his writings.  Most of Doctor Strong's books, although written in a funny way, have serious messages. For example, in Mc Elligot's Pool, he describes the danger of pollution. He discusses the arms race in The Butter Battle Book, written in nineteen eighty-four.  Doctor Strong is almost eighty-four years old now. He says he never planned to write stories just for children. He says he writes stories that interest people of all ages. He says he uses easy words so that everyone, even a child, can understand.【小题1】Alfred Strong is a famous _______ in the United States.A.doctorB.artistC.writerD.reader【小题2】Doctor Strong first became famous in _______.A.his eighties when an art show was travelling around the United StatesB.his fifties when his drawings and writings were publishedC.nineteen eighty-four when his book MeEligot's Pool was publishedD.his thirties when his first book was published【小题3】Doctor Strong's books are very popular in America because _______.A.they are stories about animals such as cats, elephants and so onB.they are written in easy words with colourful picturesC.he organized the art show in California    D.they are written in a funny way
Common sense would tell us that physically active children may be more likely to become active and healthy adults.In the United States, elementary and middle schools are advised to give students two and a half hours of physical activity a week. That is what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Heart Association recommend. They say high schools should provide about four hours of physical activity each week.Yet many schools across the country have reduced their physical education programs. Just this week, a study reported that life expectancy has fallen or is no longer increasing in some parts of the United States. The situation is worst among poor people in the southern states, and especially women. Public health researchers say it is largely the result of increases in fatness, smoking and high blood pressure. They also blame differences in health services around the country.In 2006, a study found that only four percent of primary schools provided daily physical education all year for all grades. This was true of eight percent of middle schools and two percent of high schools. The study also found that twenty-two percent of all schools did not require students to take any P.E.Charlene Burgeson , a health expert says one problem for P.E. teachers is that schools are under pressure to put more time into academic subjects. Also, parents may agree that children need exercise in school. Yet many parents today still have bad memories of being chosen last for teams because teachers favored the good athletes in class.But experts say P.E. classes have changed. They say the goal has moved away from competition and toward personal performance, as a way to build a lifetime of activity. These days, teachers often lead activities like weight training and yoga.Some parents like the idea of avoiding competitive sports in P.E. class. Yet others surely dislike that idea. In the end, schools may find themselves in a no-win situation.【小题1】 The underlined word “expectancy” in Paragraph 3 probably means “&&&&&& ”&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&A.qualityB.lengthC.exceptionD.depth【小题2】According to the passage which of the following may not lead to poor health?A.Fatness.B.SmokingC.High blood pressure.D.Health service【小题3】 What can be inferred after you read this passage?A.Physical activities are becoming more and more popular in American schools.B.All the schools provided daily physical education all year for all students.C.Parents think children need physical education for their bad memories.D.Students spent less time on physical education for academic pressure.【小题4】 What is the main idea about this passage?A.P.E. is the most important subject for all students.B.P.E has changed its goal for some reasons in America.C.It introduces us the present situation of P.E in American schools and its cause.D.P.E can help students improve their academic subjects.
Thousands of people began pouring into Pennsylvania from other states. They wanted to buy lottery(彩票) tickets. The tickets cost only $0.9each. But that small spending could bring them a reward of $90 million. That was the second largest lottery jackpot(积累奖金) in history。 More than 87 million tickets were bought for the Pennsylvania lottery drawing . Those who bought tickets had to choose seven numbers from 1 to 80 The chance of winning was one in 9.6 million. But that little chance certainly did not affect tickets sales. In the last few days before the drawing , tickets were selling at the unbelievable rate of 500 per second . Experts say many people buy lottery tickets because they just want to have a piece of the action .Others say the lottery is a stock market for poor people . It allows them to dream about wealth they will& probably never have . But many people believe lotteries are no better than legalized(合法化) gambling . Some critics note that most people who play are poor and may not be able to afford the tickets .There are also many addicts who take the game seriously, They may pour their life savings into lottery tickets .Some clubs have been formed to help them kick the habit. Politicians like lotteries because they provide money that would otherwise have to come from new taxes. The profits from lotteries are usually used to pay for education or programs for senior citizens. But critics say this arrangement just allows states to legalize vice(恶习) under the name of social progress . No matter whether you regard state lotteries right or not , you can not refuse to accept their extreme popularity with many Americans .【小题1】The main idea of the passage is that________________.A.lotteries are of great benefit to everyone who buys them.B.play a lottery is just like investing in the stock market C.a lot of people buy lottry tickets ,but lotteries cause disagreementD.lotteries are just legalized vice【小题2】Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage ?A.Politicians like lotteries because they do not have to pay extra tax.B.The popularity of lotteries in America actually is social progress .C.Some critics do not like lotteries because many poor people waste their money on them .D.People love the lottery because it is a stock market.【小题3】In just one hour in the last few days , the Pennsylvania lottery sold tickets totaling about ______________.A.$1.62millionB.$90 millionC.$9.6millionD.$87million【小题4】People who are addicted to playing lotteries should __________.A.join a club B.kick the habitC.win the PennsylvaniaD.save every cent
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请输入手机号Nasser and Aseel Muthana's father say ISIS jihadis deserve to die in drone strike | Daily Mail Online
'If they die, they'll have been asking for it': Father of British jihadis from Cardiff says they deserve to die in RAF drone strike
Father of Nasser and Aseel Muthana fears they could be on UK 'kill list'Reyaad Khan, 21, from Cardiff, killed along with Ruhul Amin on August 21Cameron has said Khan was a 'terrorist directing murder on our streets'
Community leader Saleem Kidwai said: 'He was not the charismatic person who could control something like this from far away' Others say Khan, who called for murder in UK, 'got what was coming'By
09:42 BST, 8 September 2015
06:43 BST, 9 September 2015
The father of two extremist brothers who fled Britain to join
with drone strike victim Reyaad Khan fears his sons could be the next targets. revealed the RAF killed Khan in a secret operation on August 21 because the former student was 'directing murder on our streets'.Today the father of Nasser and Aseel Muthana, both friends of Khan from Cardiff, said that if they die too 'they will have been asking for it.
Fears: The father of Nasser and Aseel Muthana, left to right, fears that his sons may be next to be killed in drone strikes because they are both high profile British ISIS fightersAhmed Muthana told the
newspaper: It's quite shocking what happened to Reyaad, but he asked for it by going out there. He got what was coming to him.'If (Nasser and Aseel) die then they will have been asking for it too.'It could happen to anyone out there, anyone could be a victim. if you go out there then you have to expect it.' Mr Muthana said he feared he 'won't see them again'.
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'I am frightened because my sons are out there too. I worry that they could be on a hit list. I don't think I will ever see my sons again.'I know I won't see them again. I am sad they have gone'. Khan may have been on a Government 'kill list' with at least ten British Isis fighters on it, including the terror group's executioner in chief Mohammed Emwazi, known as Jihadi John. Nasser Muthana, a former medical student, appeared in the ISIS recruitment video alongside Khan and fellow drone strike victim Ruhul Amin. Despite his assassination friends say 21-year-Reyaad Khanw was not charismatic or powerful enough to mastermind an atrocity in the UK.
Defence: Friends of Reyaad Khan, who was killed by a British drone in Syria, say he lacked the 'charisma' to mastermind an attack on the UK's streetsThe Prime Minister argued his death was an act of self defence but friends believe the 'brainwashed' former student should have been intercepted by the security services before he fled Cardiff for Syria last year.Mr Muthana added: 'I don't believe what Cameron is saying. The government has said things like this before. It's just like Tony Blair and Iraq. In five years' time we'll be looking back at this and trying to find out the truth about it.' This view was not shared by the teenage daughter of David Haines, the British aid worker who was beheaded by Islamic State last year.Bethany Haines, 18, told ITV News: 'I think the drone attack is a step in the right direction - but I think more direct action is needed.'More strikes need to be carried out and not just on British jihadists, but on ISIS in general.'I still think ground action is necessary and I hope that it will be considered as a next step to wiping out Islamic State and their supposed caliphate.' Khan was said to be plotting an atrocity at an event attended by the Queen and was used as an ISIS poster boy to lure jihadists to Syria and Iraq.Before his death he could have faced a war crimes trial over the mass executions of prisoners, which he boasted about online along with gruesome pictures of decapitated bodies. Yet today the Muslim community in his home town
expressed its 'shock' at his death and said they believe he was not a direct threat to Britain.Other neighbours in his terraced street in Cardiff said frankly: 'He got what was coming to him'. Saleem Kidwai, Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Wales, told the BBC: 'We are not convinced (about the evidence) because he was not the kind of charismatic person who could control something like this from far away.'As the news spread around the community the questions are being asked, what information did the intelligence or the government have'.
Reyaad Khan, 21, from Cardiff, (left) and Ruhul Amin, from Aberdeen, (right) appeared together in an ISIS recruitment video with Nasser Muthana (centre) last year aimed at luring jihadists to Syria and Iraq
Death: Another British fanatic, Junaid Hussain, from Birmingham was killed by a US drone strike late last month, his mother Shareen, right today, refused to comment todayThe grieving mother of Reyaad Khan was today 'sick with grief' over the death of her terrorist son killed in an RAF drone strike.Rukia Khan, 41, who begged her son to return home, has been left devastated after he was killed in Syria in a targeted attack authorised by the UK Government.
LEGAL ROW OVER RIGHT TO KILL HAS ECHOES OF BLAIR'S IRAQ WAR
The row over the legality of the drone strike in Syria has echoes of the way Tony Blair took Britain to war in Iraq more than a decade ago.The Labour Prime Minister justified the 2003 invasion on the basis of disputed reports about weapons of mass destruction.The then attorney general, Peter - now Lord - Goldsmith, changed his mind about the legality of war, first rejecting then approving the invasion.The legal advice was not published at the time but extracts were released by the Chilcot Inquiry in 2010.The Labour party has now called for the legal advice on the missile strike against Reyaad Khan to be published - something David Cameron has refused.Ministers insist that the legal advice given by Tory attorney general Jeremy Wright was 'absolutely clear'.Under Article 51 of the UN charter, countries have an 'inherent right' to act in self-defence 'if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations'.The debate will now focus on the extent to which Khan - living 3,000 miles away in Syria - posed a direct threat to Britain.Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told the BBC: 'The advice here is absolutely clear. Any country has a right to self-defence and to protect itself against armed attacks. 'It's the same basis on which the military can use lethal force if as a way to prevent potential loss of life.'Unmanned aircraft still have pilots that need to confirm with rules of engagement that I set.'Any military strike like this has to be done in accordance with rules we set out. It has to be absolutely necessary, proportionate and avoid civilian causalities.But critics accused the government of 'extrajudicial killing'.Kate Hudson of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament said: 'A British prime minister now claims the right to kill British citizens when they travel abroad.'
His father Nazim, 46, was today caring for his wife at the family's Cardiff home which Reyaad fled to join Islamic State jihadists two years ago.His parents were 'healing their wounds' on the revelation that their son was the first British citizen to be killed in a targeted drone attack.Speaking on the doorstep of his Cardiff terraced house Nazim said: 'I must go and look after my wife as she is very sick.'I will not be making any comment about what happened to Reyaad.' The Prime Minister argued his death was an act of self defence but friends believe the 'brainwashed' former student should have been intercepted by the security services before he fled Cardiff for Syria last year. Mokaddus Miah, Secretary of Jalalia mosque in Grangetown, Cardiff, said: 'If a person has done something bad then he has what's coming to him. Anyone who wants to do something wrong must be punished. But I would have preferred to see him tried in a British court.'
Friend Mohamed Islam said that his family is 'devastated' by his death and his mother Rukia, who had begged him to return home, was 'broken' by the news.He said: 'The family heard a couple of weeks ago. I don't think they
were informed of the British involvement'.Mr Islam has called on David Cameron to reveal 'the truth of this incident'. He added: 'It's a devastating situation for us as a local community. In the coming days and months the members of the public would like more details'. People at the mosque used by the family of Reyaad Khan admitted that they had no idea he had been killed by an RAF drone. A member of the mosque who only wanted to be known as 'Shamsu' said about British forces having killed Reyaad: 'It makes it worse because it's like your own country that's killed you.'But they [the government] should've stopped him before he even got there because he's a child at the end of the day and he's been manipulated.' Another friend, who did not want to be named, believed his parents were not aware he was killed by the RAF.He said: 'It is terrible, devastating, for them.'The family live in a terraced house two miles from Cardiff city centre and close to the Cardiff City football stadium.Neighbours were split over the action - with some saying: 'Good riddance' and others that it was a 'sad day when the British Govt kill one of our own.'
Jalalia Mosque in Riverside, Cardiff, where family members of IS terror suspect Reyaad Khan, told fellow worshippers the 21-year-old had been killed in a drone strikeRoofer Steve Leyshon, 32, said: 'He had what was coming to him. He threatened to kill us so we killed him.'If the RAF hadn't taken him out then he wanted to take out our families. I feel sorry for his parents - but I don't want to feel sorry for any parents of any British people he wanted to kill.'But fellow neigbour Pete Kaminski, 52, said: 'I'm not happy that we killed a British boy like that. We should have brought him to justice not execute him.'In this country we pride ourself on being just, democratic and moral. I'm not comfortable that we can just blow a young man up from out of the skies.'Khan was believed to be towards the top of a British 'kill list', which the Government has denied exists.
A second Islamic State fanatic from Britain, Ruhul Amin, died when Khan, the main target, was killed.A third, Birmingham hacker Junaid Hussain, was killed three days later by a US drone in a joint operation with the UK.
Junaid's mother, Shareen Hussain was stony-faced as she left her Birmingham home this morning and refused to speak.A neighbour, who did not want to be named, said: 'He deserved everything he got, all of the ISIS fighters do.'He's gone over there and done evil things, murdering people - he deserves to die.'
Statement: David Cameron used a speech in the House of Commons to unveil details of the RAF drone strike, which he said was an act of self defence
Khan and Amin were blitzed by a drone controlled by RAF pilots sitting 3,000 miles away in Lincolnshire.The experienced airmen were operating the controversial ?10million Reaper unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) from a hi-tech control hub at RAF Waddington.As the unsuspecting jihadists travelled in a vehicle in Raqqa, capital of the so-called Islamic State, they were wiped out by a laser-guided Hellfire missile. Pilots from 13 Squadron ordered the craft – about the size of a small executive jet – to carry out airstrikes from a height of up to 50,000ft using its fearsome arsenal. Before Khan's death he could have faced a war crimes trial as he repeatedly uploaded bloodthirsty posts and pictures on social media bragging about the inhumane killings.
PLOT TO 'KILL THE QUEEN FOILED' A WEEK BEFORE DRONE STRIKE
Last month a major security operation was mounted in central London over fears of an ISIS attack against a VJ Day parade attended by the QueenAn ISIS-inspired terror plot to kill the Queen was foiled just a week before the drone strike was launched by the RAF. Last month it emerged that intelligence services had uncovered a plan to use an Improvised Explosive Device to murder the Queen, dignitaries and veterans at a VJ Day parade.A major security operation was launched over fears of terrorists intent on causing carnage at the event on August 15 to mark the end of WWII in the Far East, during which 30,000 British troops were killed between 1941 to 1945.Downing Street refused to confirm which events were targeted by Khan.But David Cameron told MPs he was behind 'plots to attack high profile public commemorations, including those taking place this summer'.
In one he posted graphic photographs of the distorted corpses of alleged victims, tweeting: 'Guys we caught & executed. This is how they looked less than an hr l8er'.The former college student from the Welsh capital also laughed about witnessing the 'longest decapitation ever' and boasted in another: 'Executed many prisoners yesterday.' Khan is believed to have been radicalised through extremist websites in his bedroom in Cardiff. The revelation that Khan, 21, from Cardiff, had been assassinated in the first RAF drone strike against a Briton triggered claims of extra-judicial killing.But Mr Cameron insisted the attacks were an act of self-defence and not a softening-up exercise to persuade Parliament to vote for further military action against Islamic State targets in Syria.Some of the IS plots had been foiled while others were still active, he added.Asked if he would do it again, the Prime Minister told MPs: 'If it is necessary to safeguard the UK and act in self-defence, and there are no other ways of doing it, then yes, I would. The choice we were left with was to think, this is all too difficult, throw up our arms and walk away, and then wait for the chaos and terrorism to hit Britain, or to take action in the national interest.'He said Khan and Hussain were orchestrating attacks on 'high-profile public commemorations' over the summer from the IS stronghold of Raqqa.Targets included VJ Day last month and the VE day commemorations of May 8. The commemorations were attended by scores of war veterans and dignitaries – including the Queen.Other events in the fanatics' sights are understood to have been Armed Forces Day in June, which marked the murder of Lee Rigby by two Islamist extremists, and the 100th anniversary of the Anzac landings at Gallipoli in April.Mr Cameron had been expected to deliver a statement to MPs solely on the refugee crisis caused by the war between IS and the Syrian regime. But, after pledging to provide sanctuary to 20,000 Syrians, he shocked MPs with the revelations about the operation against Khan, who has featured in IS recruitment propaganda.Ex-Conservative Attorney General Dominic Grieve said the strikes were 'draconian', adding: 'I strongly suspect it will lead to a legal challenge.' Kate Hudson of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament said it was an extra-judicial killing. Michael Fallon today defended the targeted drone strike to kill a British jihadi in Syria and vowed he would do it again.The Defence Secretary ordered the extraordinary use of military force in
without parliamentary authority to kill Cardiff schoolboy Reyaad Khan, 21, who was accused of plotting bloody attacks on the streets of Britain.Mr Fallon warned there were more jihadis in Syria orchestrating atrocity in the UK, Australia and the United States and he 'would not hesitate to do it again'.And he attacked the 'absurdity' of British armed forces being authorised to carry out missile strikes against ISIS in Iraq but not in neighbouring Syria, described as the 'brain cell' of the fanatical group.
Sick: Reyaad Khan (left) and Nasser Muthana (right) - both from Cardiff - featured in a propaganda video last June in which they urged Britons to travel to Syria
Teenager: Before leaving for Syria in late 2013, Khan (circled), was a straight A pupil who loved sports
Change: Reyaad Khan's Twitter profile picture, which comes under the name the nom de guerre Abu Dujana, who boasted of being prepared to be a martyrThe Prime Minister said he would stick to his pledge to hold a Commons vote – probably next month – before ordering the RAF to conduct bombing raids against Islamic State terrorists in Syria.'I believe that case only grows stronger with the growing number of terrorist plots being directed or inspired by IS's core leadership in Raqqa,' he added.
COULD FAMILIES OF DEAD FANATICS NOW SUE THE UK GOVERNMENT?
Britain could be sued by the family of dead ISIS fanatic Reyaad Khan, ministers were warned this afternoon.David Cameron today repeatedly insisted that the government's decision to authorise the drone strike was 'entirely lawful' and compatible with UN rules because the government was acting in self-defence.The airstrike was signed off as legal by the Government's most senior lawyer after intelligence chiefs alerted ministers to Khan's planned terror plots in Britain this summer.Under article 51 of the UN charter countries have an 'inherent right' to act in self-defence 'if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations'.However, the former Attorney General Dominic Grieve tonight warned that the government would be unable to release the secret intelligence which showed Britain was under threat. This would leave the government open to being sued by Khan's family, who live in Britain.He told the BBC: 'I very strongly suspect that in view of the fact that this man was a British national with family in this country it will probably lead to a legal challenge in due course.'Downing Street has confirmed the full details of the legal justification for the strikes will not be published. Mr Cameron said Britain's intelligence agencies had identified the fanatic as a direct threat to the UK. The PM said the National Security Council then agreed that 'should the right opportunity arise, then the military action should take action'.'The Attorney General attended the meeting and confirmed there was a legal basis for action. And on that basis, the Defence Secretary authorised the operation.'Critics of the 2003 invasion have repeatedly claimed that it broke international law and accuse Tony Blair of taking the country to war on a lie.
But Michael Clarke, of the Royal United Services Institute, a think-tank, said Mr Cameron appeared to be trying to 'log-roll a controversial issue through Parliament' by wrapping it up with the high-profile case involving Khan. Khan, who was previously a straight A student in Cardiff, became a poster boy for ISIS when he appeared in a propaganda video entitled 'There Is No Life Without Jihad' in June last year, urging Westerners to join the war. Later attending St David's Catholic sixth-form college in the city, he was described by friends as a studious pupil who loved sports. At the time of his disappearance, Khan's family said they were desperate for him to come home. His mother Rukia, 41, pleaded: 'Please come back before it is too late. You are my only one son. I love you so much.'
The family has not commented since.
Student Rahul Amin moved from Aberdeen to Leicester and his family is believed to have returned to Bangladesh. Stephen Marvin, a former school friend of Amin, said he deserved his fate. 'It's hard to say he didn't get what he deserved in the end,' he told ITV News. 'He was my childhood best friend but he was a totally different person in the last 12 to 18 months so it was hard to sympathise with him.'
As questions over the legality of their deaths, David Cameron rejected the call to publish the legal advice. The revelations reignited debate about Britain's future role in wider military action in Syria.'Mr Cameron was humiliated in 2013 when Tory rebels joined with Labour to vote down a plan to launch missile strikes against the Assad regime. The Prime Minister, Chancellor George Osborne, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon and Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond have agreed there is a 'strong case' for action in Syria as well as neighbouring Iraq.A vote on joining bombing raids against ISIS is expected in the Commons next month. Briton Junaid Hussain, 21, who died in a US strike four days after Khan and Amin, was no.3 on America's ISIS target list due to his hacking credentials and key role as a foreign fighter recruiter for the jihadi group before the United States killed him in a drone strike.
RAF Reaper drones had been carrying out surveillance over Syria but ministers had insisted it would require 'further permission' for them to use weapons in the country
Reyaad Khan was an ISIS poster boy who appeared in a shocking recruitment video aimed at luring jihadists to Syria and Iraq.Before his death he could have faced a war crimes trial as he repeatedly uploaded bloodthirsty posts and pictures on social media bragging about the inhumane killings.In one he posted graphic photographs of the distorted corpses of alleged victims, tweeting: 'Guys we caught & executed. This is how they looked less than an hr l8er'.The former college student from the Welsh capital also laughed about witnessing the 'longest decapitation ever' and boasted in another: 'Executed many prisoners yesterday.'His claims about his involvement in the crimes carried out by a unit of ISIS are now being investigated by the United Nations.Khan is believed to have been radicalised through extremist websites in his bedroom in Cardiff.It was all so different back in 2009 when Khan, then 15, was said to be thrilled to meet former Labour minister Mr Balls. Just a year after the picture was taken, Khan spoke on a film of his wish to rid the world of 'evil' and of the problems of growing up in a deprived inner-city area.He also once said in a Facebook post he wanted to become the country's first Asian Prime Minister after sitting on a local youth forum.
British ISIS fighter Reyaad Khan (circled, left) from Wales was killed in an airstrike in Syria just six years after he was 'thrilled' to meet ex- Labour MP Ed Balls (circled, right)Going by the nom de guerre Abu Dujana Britani, had previously boasted of being prepared to be a martyr and claimed he was planning 'fireworks', meaning to become a suicide bomber. Confirmation of his death comes after a number of ISIS supporters claimed on Twitter last month that he had died.Khan – a former pupil at Cardiff's Cantonian High School in Cardiff – was described by friends as a studious pupil who loved sports.From there he went to St David's Catholic sixth-form college in the city.He left for Syria in 2013 with medical student Nasser Muthana, 21, who was joined in Syria three months later by his younger brother, Aseel, 18.Nasser had taken ?100 from his father to go on an Islamic seminar in Shrewsbury in November, but instead went to Syria.
Aberdeen schoolboy Rahul Amin, who also died in the attack on Khan, appeared in a now notorious recruitment video for Islamic militant group ISIS and fled to Syria after breaking up with his fiancée.Amin was filmed alongside fellow Britons Reyaad Khan and Nasser Muthana, both 20, urging other Muslims to fight for Isis in the Middle East.Wearing wrap-around sunglasses and a white scarf around his head, Amin described jihad as 'the cure for depression' in the video.
Amin was educated in Aberdeen after moving from Bangladesh and his family left the Scottish city for Leicester a few years agoSpeaking in front of Isis's black flag, he says: 'Are you willing to sacrifice the fat job you've got, the big car you've got, the family you have? Are you willing to sacrifice this, for the sake of Allah?'Definitely, if you sacrifice something for Allah, Allah will give you 700 times more than this.'Amin was educated in Aberdeen after moving from Bangladesh and his family left the Scottish city for Leicester a few years ago, according to reports.Stunned former classmates described how Amin was a 'really outgoing guy' who 'could have done really well for himself.'He was said to have been 'brainwashed' after he became depressed when he split from his girlfriend.One friend said: 'I think that was the turning point. He was vulnerable - and that made him easy pickings for the monsters who have brainwashed him.'
Junaid Hussain, 21, was no.3 on America's ISIS target list due to his hacking credentials and key role as a foreign fighter recruiter for the jihadi group before the United States killed him in a drone strike.Hussain, who fled Birmingham in 2013, was married to 'Mrs Terror' Sally Jones, a 44-year-old rocker turned Muslim convert from Kent. She met the jihadi fighter online and left the UK with her son to join him in Syria.
Junaid Hussain was married to 'Mrs Terror' Sally Jones, a 44-year-old rocker turned Muslim convert from Kent Jones, who now refers to herself as Sakinah Hussain, reportedly told a British jihadi bride that her husband had not been killed in an airstrike and was alive and well, which David Cameron proved false today.Hussain's wide, dubbed Mrs Terror, said she is 'blessed her husband is still alive,' according to the British jihadi bride.Just before his death Jones and her husband made headlines after they sent bombmaking manuals and boasted of 'lone wolf' terror attacks to investigative journalists, posing as jihadi brides.Computer hacker Junaid was well known on social media, frequently creating new accounts in order to threaten terror attacks on the West.In June this year, he was linked with an IS plot to attack an Armed Forces Day parade in south London.It was believed the plan was to carry out pressure cooker bomb attack, similar to the Boston Marathon attack in 2013.The intended targets were soldiers and bystanders on the route. The plan was scuppered only after Hussain unwittingly recruited an undercover journalist.He told the investigator: 'It will be big. We will hit the kuffar (unbelievers) hard InshAllah. Hit their soldiers in their own land. InshAllah. Soldiers that served in Iraq and Afganistan will be present. Jump in the crowd and detonate the bomb.'They think they can kill Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan then come back to the UK and be safe. We'll hit them hard InshAllah.'
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