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'Islamic State' claims to behead UK aid worker

September 14, 2014

The "Islamic State" terror group claims to have executed Briton David Haines. The militant organization had threatened to kill the aid worker after it murdered US journalist Steven Sotloff in response to US airstrikes.

https://p.dw.com/p/1DBvM
IS troops Photo: EPA/ALBARAKA NEWS/HANDOUT
Image: picture alliance/dpa

"Islamic State" (IS) on Saturday claimed it had beheaded Haines in what would be the third such execution in recent weeks.

The video, "A Message to the Allies of America," blames British Prime Minister David Cameron for entering a coalition with the United States, which has said it is at "war" with the group and which launched air strikes against them in Iraq.

"You entered voluntarily into a coalition with the United States against the Islamic State, just as your predecessor Tony Blair did, following a trend amongst our British prime ministers who can't find the courage to say no to the Americans," said the executioner in the video.

Haines, a father of two from Perth in Scotland, was kidnapped in Syria in March 2013 while working for the Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development (ACTED), a French relief charity. He had previously been involved in humanitarian work in other parts of the Middle East as well as the Balkans and Africa.

Haines' family had issued a plea on Saturday urging his apparent captors to contact them. "We have sent messages to you, to which we have not received a reply," the family said in a statement released by the British Foreign Office.

Steven Sotloff and fellow US journalist James Foley were also kidnapped in Syria. IS released a video claiming it had executed Foley on August 19, with the video of Sotloff's death coming two weeks later on September 2.

rc/crh (Ap, AFP, Reuters)