Exclusive

Donald Trump blasts UK for 'refusing to take back' Isis Beatles

31 October 2019, 18:49

A Kurdish security officer takes off face masks from Alexanda Amon Kotey, left, and El Shafee Elsheikh
A Kurdish security officer takes off face masks from Alexanda Amon Kotey, left, and El Shafee Elsheikh. Picture: PA

By Megan White

President Donald Trump has blasted the British government for refusing to allow the US to extradite two members of the Isis Beatles to the UK to face justice.

In an exclusive interview with Nigel Farage for LBC, the US leader said the UK “didn’t want to take back” the terrorists, who took part in brutal executions in Syria.

He labelled the move “unfair” and said “nobody wants them.”

The US captured the final two members of the terror cell, Alexanda Kotey and El Shafee Elsheikh, in February last year.

Asked by Mr Farage what should be done about the “thousands of people who fought for Isis in prison camps,” the President said: “We offered to give the ones from the UK back to the UK but they don’t want them, we offered France, we offered Germany.

“We captured them, we’ve got them, the Beatles we have – we have two of the Beatles, they were the worst.

The President spoke exclusively to Nigel Farage for LBC
The President spoke exclusively to Nigel Farage for LBC. Picture: LBC

“They came from your territory and you guys, you know, possibly incredibly smart, but maybe not, you didn’t want to take them back.

“So, as usual, the United States gets stuck with it and we’re handling it in a certain way and watching it very carefully.”

The Isis militant group, given their nicknames because of their English accents, killed American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff and British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning.

They are thought to have been responsible for at least 20 foreign hostages, many of whom were tortured.

The pair are being held in US custody in Iraq before it is thought they will be returned to American soil to face the death penalty.

When asked if Britain could “expect [the US] to send them back to us, Mr Trump responded: “Well we would, if you’d take them, but you don’t want them back, nobody wants them, you know?

“They say ‘hey, let the United States take care of them, they take care of everything else, let them take care’, which isn’t fair.

“We offered France, Macron, we offered Angela, Germany, you know many of these people came from Germany, France, UK, and they all were so happy when we captured them.

President Trump spoke exclusively to Nigel Farage on LBC
President Trump spoke exclusively to Nigel Farage on LBC. Picture: LBC

“I said ‘good, now you can take them back and try them’, and I think they maybe didn’t hear the statement, they didn’t wanna hear it.”

Mr Farage also asked the US President about the killing of Isis leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in Syria last week.

It is believed the IS chief was killed in an explosion, reportedly setting off a suicide vest he was wearing, in Idlib province at the weekend.

His spokesman, Abu Hassan al-Muhajir, was also killed by the US military.

In response to the events, Mr Trump said: “It’s been amazing. He was the head of Isis, he built a caliphate that was massive - the size of Ohio, in terms of land.

“It’s very big, between Iraq and Syria he had literally a piece of land that equated to the size of the state of Ohio and he had seven million people.

“When you see those orange suits where the heads were cut off that was him, when you see the Jordanian pilot who they captured and they burned him in a cage, that was him.

“He’s an animal and he died a coward, he died a very rough death I can tell you.

“These people we have, our soldiers, our military, is by far the greatest is the world, there’s nothing close, and they went in and he didn’t know what hit him.

“He was very well protected but they broke through like they were dealing with children, frankly, they broke through so easily and he was very well protected. He didn’t expect this to happen but tremendous protection.

“He died whimpering and crying. What he did to people, what he did to a young very beautiful young lady who was there, her parents were just devastated.

“I called them, I called many people, many of the parents and families I called of people that he killed.

“But he was a bad guy and he was bad for your country – that was a world favour, not just a US favour.”

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Andrew Tate at the Bucharest Tribunal in February

Romanian court orders trial can begin in case of influencer Andrew Tate

Andrew Tate  and his brother Tristan will stand trial over rape & human trafficking charges in Romania

Romanian court rules trial can start for Andrew Tate on charges of human trafficking and rape

US defence secretary Lloyd Austin

US set to provide six billion dollars in long-term military aid for Ukraine

Eight fire engines and around 60 firefighters were called to a fire at an industrial estate on Staffa Road in Leyton, east London

British man recruited as 'Russian spy' charged with masterminding arson attack on Ukrainian-linked businesses in London

Representatives of the Turkish communities put flowers over a memorial placed on the spot of an explosion on Istanbul’s popular pedestrian Istiklal Avenue

Syrian woman sentenced to life in prison for Istanbul bombing in 2022

Alexander Lukashenko has warned of 'apocalypse'

Belarus is hosting 'several dozen' Russian nuclear weapons, Lukashenko says, as he warns of 'apocalypse'

Vietnamese chairman of the National Assembly Vuong Dinh Hue speaks to Chinese President Xi Jinping during a meeting at the national assembly in Hanoi, Vietnam

Head of Vietnamese parliament resigns amid corruption probe

French protesters

Students resume pro-Palestinian protests at prestigious Paris university

Crew of the HMS Diamond watch the Sea Viper missile system was used to destroy the projectile

Royal Navy thwarts Houthi attack on container ship by shooting down ballistic missile in combat for first time

Former US president Donald Trump speaks to the media at Manhattan criminal court during the continuation of his trial

Trump hush money trial to resume with cross-examination of ex-tabloid publisher

Smoke rises in the sky after an explosion in the Gaza Strip as seen from southern Israel

Egypt sends delegation to Israel in hopes of brokering ceasefire

Elderly voters sit as others stand in a queue to vote during the second round of voting in the six-week-long national election near Palakkad, India

India begins second phase of national elections with Modi’s BJP as front-runner

A Palestinian baby girl, Sabreen Jouda, who was delivered prematurely after her mother was killed in an Israeli strike, lies in an incubator in the Emirati hospital

Premature baby rescued from dead mother’s womb in Gaza dies

A man stands on a house that was destroyed by an Israeli airstrike, in Hanine village, south Lebanon

Hezbollah ambushes Israeli convoy, killing civilian

Ramia Abdo Sultan, lawyer and communications relations advisor of the Australian National Imams Council with Imams speaks during a press conference in Sydney g

Muslim groups claim ‘double standard’ in police handling of Sydney stabbings

Israel Palestinians Campus Protests

Pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia University settle in for 10th day