Oxford Muslim convert 'Jihadi Jack' charged with being member of Isil

Jack Letts from Oxford is the first white British man to join Isil
Jack Letts from Oxford is the first white British man to join Isil

A man from Oxford who converted to Islam and travelled to Syria has been charged with being a member of islamic State. 

Jack Letts, 21, dubbed "Jihadi Jack", was arrested by Kurdish forces in northern Syria after fleeing the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) stronghold of Raqqa. 

A statement from the Democratic Federation of Northern Syria (DFNS) - a self-declared autonomous region - said Mr Letts had been taken to a prison in Qamishli, Rojava, northern Syria.

Letts travelled to Syria in 2014 - having earlier converted to Islam while at school in Cherwell - and is understood to have been captured in May 2017.

He was pictured with long hair and beard in Isil territory in Syria holding his index finger up to the sky, an Islamic gesture used by Isil as a symbol of their cause. 

John Letts and his wife Sally Lane arrive at Westminster Magistrate's Court in June - Credit: SWNS
John Letts and his wife Sally Lane arrive at Westminster Magistrates Court in June 2016 Credit: SWNS

He married in Iraq and now has a child.

In a conversation with the BBC in June from his prison cell, he said he hired a smuggler to help him escape the caliphate by motorbike before walking through a minefield into Kurdish territory.

Letts says he doesn't want anything to do with Isil.  "I hate them more than the Americans hate them," said. 'I realised they were not upon the truth so they put me in prison three times and threatened to kill me."

His parents have denied he went to Syria to fight with Isil, and started a petition to protest his innocence. 

Foreign Office minister Rory Stewart asserted last week that the only way to deal with British Isis fighters in Syria would be “in almost every case, to kill them”.

Mr Letts’ parents, Sally Lane and John Letts, criticised Mr Stewart for “arbitrarily [calling] for extrajudicial killings on uncharged British citizens”, adding that the minister appeared to be “supported by Downing Street”. 

The couple are awaiting trial following claims that they funded terrorism by sending money to their son - charges which they deny.