Police hunt family of 12 feared bound for Syria


(MENAFN- Gulf Times) Police yesterday said they were hunting for three sisters and their nine children whose family fear they may have travelled to Syria to join a relative believed to be involved in the fighting there.

Khadija Dawood, Sugra Dawood and Zohra Dawood and their children, aged between three and 15, from Bradford, northern England, were reported missing five days ago.

According to media reports, the group disappeared after travelling to Madinah in Saudi Arabia and there are now concerns they may have tried to join a brother of the three sisters who is suspected to be fighting with Islamic State militants in Syria.

"One of the possibilities is they travelled to Turkey to travel to Syria," Balaal Khan, the lawyer acting on behalf of the women's husbands, said in a statement. "The suspicion, and main concern, is that the women have taken their children to Syria."

Naz Shah, the local member of parliament, told Sky News she had met the women's husbands and that they were shocked to have discovered their families were missing.

"If they have gone to Syria then the alarm bells are really, really loud," she said, saying work had to be done to understand why the women would have taken such action without their husbands' consent.

A lawyer for the fathers said they last spoke to the children the day before they were due to get on the plane home.

"The last conversation with their children was when they were in Madinah on the 8th. They said 'We love you, we're missing you, we can't wait to come home'," Balaal Hussain Khan said.

"They have been distraught, crying, they don't know what to do."

Khan said he could not confirm reports that the family were under police surveillance before they travelled to Saudi Arabia.

West Yorkshire police declined to confirm or deny the reports.

Khan previously said police were notified around six days ago, but are limited in what they can do because it is out of their jurisdiction.

British authorities estimate more than 700 Britons have travelled to Syria, with a significant proportion thought to have joined Islamic Sate which has taken over vast areas of the country and neighbouring Iraq.

Families are among those to have travelled, and police said of those arrested on their return to Britain last year, 11% were women and 17% were under 20.

"We are extremely concerned for the safety of the family," said assistant chief constable Russ Foster, of West Yorkshire Police.


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