A video by
so-called Islamic State (IS) featuring a man and young boy with British accents
is "desperate stuff", Prime Minister David Cameron has said.
The film, which
purports to show the killing of five men who IS says were spying for the UK, is
from a group that is "losing territory" and "increasingly losing
anybody's sympathy", he said.
The UK's
intelligence agencies are examining the footage.
Voice-print
analysis will be carried out to try to identify the masked man.
The man says the
10-minute video - which has not been independently verified - is a message for
David Cameron, and he threatens attacks in the UK.
In the video, the
masked man, who is holding a gun, mocks Mr Cameron for daring to
"challenge the might" of the extremist group.
He goes on to say:
"We will continue to wage jihad, break borders and one day invade your
land where we will rule by the Sharia."
'Desperate stuff'
There has been
growing speculation the man could be Siddhartha Dhar, a British jihadist
arrested in 2014, who later jumped bail and subsequently appeared in Syria.
The sister of Mr
Dhar - who is also known as Abu Rumaysah - has told the BBC that when she first
heard the audio of the video she feared it was her brother, although having
later viewed the pictures, she was not entirely convinced it was him.
"I was in a
state of shock," said Konika Dhar.
"I believed
the audio to resemble, from what I remember, the voice of my brother but having
viewed the short clip in detail, I wasn't entirely convinced which put me at
ease".
A senior member of
the banned Islamist extremist group al-Muhajiroun, however, has told the BBC he
"has no doubt" that the voice is that of Mr Dhar.
BBC security
correspondent Gordon Corera said confirmation of the masked man's identity was
not going to come quickly.
"I don't
think the security services will want to necessarily go public unless they have
to with confirmation because in their eyes, this is a live investigation and
they don't want to have a running public commentary about it," he said.
Children also
regularly feature in IS propaganda videos and the brief appearance of a child -
apparently with a British accent - at the end of the video will also most
likely be of interest to the authorities, he added.
"But this is
an organisation that's losing territory, it's losing ground, it's, I think,
increasingly losing anybody's sympathy," he said.
He said IS hated
the UK for being a "successful, tolerant, democratic, multi-faith,
multi-ethnic nation", but added that Britain would "never be
cowed".
Speaking to radio
station LBC, Mr Cameron said he had viewed "part" of the execution
video.
He said media
organisations should "use their judgement" about showing the video,
adding: "I don't mind people seeing, within limits, a little bit of this
just to remind them about what a truly ghastly, murderous organisation we're up
against."
Islamic State's
child militants
Watch: Inside
Ramadi amid IS battle
The video shows
five men, wearing jumpsuits and kneeling in a desert location, who appear to be
shot in the back of the head, after making what is claimed to be their
confessions.
One of the men
says he had been asked to provide information about the location of IS
militants, including two Britons, apparently to help target them with air
strikes.
Some of the five
say they are from Raqqa in Syria while another says he is from Benghazi, Libya,
but none say they are from the UK.
A member of a
Raqqa-based group which opposes IS, Abu al-Furat, told the BBC the victims
included shopkeepers and businessmen from the town, and he doubted any of them
were spying for Britain.
IS claimed that
one of them had been using his internet cafe for spying purposes, he said.
"I know
personally two of them, who started demonstrating very early," he said.
"They are the sons of the Syrian revolution in Raqqa."
After the apparent
killings the young boy, who seems to be aged about six or seven years old and
is wearing military-style clothing, is seen pointing into the distance and
talking about killing "unbelievers".
'Absolutely
paranoid'
IS has previously
released propaganda videos showing killings, including footage showing the
apparent beheading of two US journalists, James Foley and Steven Sotloff, and
two British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning.
Mohammed Emwazi,
the Briton who became known as Jihadi John, appeared in the videos. The US said
he was killed in a drone strike it carried out in Syria in November.
Image caption
Mohammed Emwazi was killed last year
Intelligence
officials are using voice-print analysis to see if the voice of the man in the
new video matches that of any individuals known to have travelled to Syria and
Iraq.
BBC security
correspondent Frank Gardner said the actions of the man in the latest video
would "probably be a fairly short-lived attempt... to take on the mantle
of Mohammed Emwazi".
It showed IS was
"absolutely paranoid" about informants and "looking over their
shoulders, wondering where the next drone strike is coming from", he said.
But Shiraz Maher,
senior research fellow at the International Centre for the Study of
Radicalisation at Kings College London, said the group remained "very
powerful".
Jonathan Russell,
head of policy at the counter-extremist think tank, the Quilliam Foundation,
said it was "shocking" to hear British voices and to see a child in
the video, but that both were being used "to reinforce the IS brand".
At least 700
people from the UK have travelled to support or fight for jihadist
organisations in Syria and Iraq, British police say. About half have since
returned to Britain.
The IS group,
notorious for its brutality, seized large swathes of territory in Syria and
Iraq in 2014, when it formally declared the establishment of a
"caliphate" - a state governed in accordance with Islamic law, or
Sharia, by God's deputy on Earth, or caliph.
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