Celso Rodrigues Da Costa
Celso Rodrigues Da Costa | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Portuguese |
Other names | Abu Isa Andaluzi |
Occupation(s) | salesman, athlete, jihadist |
Known for | Appeared in controversial online videos |
Celso Rodrigues Da Costa was born in Portugal, and travelled to the United Kingdom, where he was converted to a militant form of Islam, and travelled to Daesh occupied Syria to volunteer to be a jihadi fighter.[1]
The Times reports that, while living in London, he worked as a sales assistant for Harrods.[2]
Da Costa's older brother, Edgar Da Costa, was the first of a group of Portuguese friends, living in the UK, to travel to Syria, leaving in 2012.[3] The five had all had aspirations to play association football at a professional level, and some commentators speculated that jihadist recruiters were using football clubs as a recruiting venue.[4] UK Security officials at MI-5 had been monitoring Da Costa, and a group of radicalized Portuguese friends living in the UK, before his departure for Daesh.[5]
In April 2014 a provocative video was broadcast from Daesh controlled internet accounts where a masked man with a strong accent called upon Muslims in the west to fight for Daesh.[6][1] The caption to the video identified him as someone who had played for the Arsenal football club. Lassana Diarra felt called upon to deny he was behind the video, when commentators first speculated that he was the masked figure. Experts with UK security agencies identified the accent as Portuguese, and named Da Costa as the masked man. The Arsenal football club stated they had never carried Da Costa on their player's roster, but said he may have participated in a training camp.
Da Costa has been identified as the individual behind provocative social media posts, from Daesh territory. He is alleged to have been part of the unit of foreign volunteers that included the individuals known as the "Jihadi Beatles".[7]
In November 2015 Da Costa stirred more controversy through a video in which he said that, in addition to sacrificing a sheep, for the festival of Eid, he had "killed a dirty kaffir", as well.[2]
Da Costa married Reema Iqbal, a citizen of the United Kingdom, in 2010.[8][7] In 2014, shortly before travelling to the Daesh territory he took a second wife, Natalie Bracht. His first wife Reema Iqbal was born in the United Kingdom, to parents originally from Pakistan. His second wife, Bracht, was a joint citizen of the United Kingdom and Germany, who was raised in Germany, by her German mother.
References
[edit]- ^ a b
Duncan Gardham (2014-04-14). "'Former Arsenal player' in Syria jihad video identified as Portuguese". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2015-11-15. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
Sources at Arsenal say they do not believe he was a full-time player but he may have attended coaching sessions, when potential players are assessed before signing for the club at the age of 16.
- ^ a b
Dipesh Gadher (2015-11-29). "Harrods Isis recruit brags of slaughter to celebrate Eid". The Times. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
Celso Rodrigues Da Costa, 28, laughs as he tells viewers that his version of the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha in Syria involves not only sacrificing a sheep but killing a "dirty kafir" as well.
- ^
James Dorsey (2015-02-02). "Football clubs used as tool to recruit jihadists". Hurriyet Daily News. Archived from the original on 2019-03-16. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
Celso Rodrigues da Costa, whose brother Edgar is also in Syria, is believed to have attended open training sessions for Arsenal, but failed to get selected.
- ^
James Dorsey (2014-09-19). "Syrian Jihadists Employ Soccer as Propaganda and Recruitment Tool". Huffington Post. Archived from the original on 2014-04-21. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
Jihadists, often eager to exploit soccer for their ideological goals, have found a new way of employing the game for propaganda and recruitment purposes. A recent jihadist video suggested that an apparent Portuguese fighter in Syria was a former French international who had played for British premier league club Arsenal.
- ^ Natasha Donn (2019-03-11). "Women married to Portuguese IS fighters stripped of British citizenship". Portugal resident. Archived from the original on 2019-03-16. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
- ^
Josh Layton (2014-04-04). "Former Arsenal footballer 'joins Jihadi fighters waging war in Syria'". The Mirror (UK). Archived from the original on 2014-04-05. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
But his words, spoken in English in a heavy Portuguese or southern European accent, contain a message of hatred far removed from the world of sport.
- ^ a b
"Ex-Wife of Former Jihadist Tells of Miraculous Escape from Terror Clutches". Al Bawaba. 2018-11-26. Archived from the original on 2018-12-12. Retrieved 2019-03-16.
In 2010 Iqbal was introduced to Celso Rodrigues Da Costa, an Islamic convert, who asked her is she wanted to marry him.
- ^
Josie Ensor (2019-02-14). "Dispatch: 'I am not one of them', says British woman begging to come home from Syria's 'Camp of Death'". The Telegraph (UK). Al Hawl, Syria. Archived from the original on 2019-03-15. Retrieved 2019-02-25.
Reports suggest her husband Celso Rodrigues Da Costa, a former Harrods sales assistant, appeared in Isil propaganda videos and was a member of a notorious cell involved in the kidnapping and murder of western hostages.