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Feb 4, 2015

Slaughtered for their entertainment: Crowds gather to watch the barbaric murder of Jordanian pilot on specially erected giant screens on the streets of Raqqa... and CHEER when the airman goes up in flames

Abuse: Among those watching the atrocity is this child, who appears no older than six. He is seen smiling and talking vividly about the murder, while eulogising about ISIS and their barbaric acts
Abuse: Among those watching the atrocity is this child, who appears no older than six. He is seen smiling and talking vividly about the murder, while eulogising about ISIS and their barbaric acts
A sickening video has emerged showing crowds of Islamic State supporters watching the barbaric murder of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh on specially erected giant screens in the terror group's de facto capital Raqqa.
The four minute video, titled 'Muslims' Joy at Burning of Jordanian Pilot', shows men and children gathering in the busy streets of the city to watch footage of Kasasbeh being burnt alive by terrorists.

The crowd can be heard cheering and shouting religious slogans as the airman goes up in flames, before members of the crowd are interviewed and asked for their views on the atrocity, which has been widely condemned as one of the most sickening acts ever committed to film
Among those questions is a child who appears no more than six-years-old. He is seen smiling and talking vividly about the murder, while eulogising about ISIS and their barbaric acts.
Support: The video shows crowds of Islamic State supporters cheering the barbaric murder of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh on specially erected giant screens in the terror group's de facto capital Raqqa
Broadcast: The four minute video, which appears to be an official ISIS release, shows young men and children gathering in the busy streets of the city to watch footage of Kasasbeh being burnt alive by terrorists
Abuse: Among those watching the atrocity is this child, who appears no older than six. He is seen smiling and talking vividly about the murder, while eulogising about ISIS and their barbaric acts
Abuse: Among those watching the atrocity is this child, who appears no older than six. He is seen smiling and talking vividly about the murder, while eulogising about ISIS and their barbaric acts

While the interviews take place footage from Kasasbeh's original murder video are seen being played to large crowds in the background. As those being interviewed are not paying attention to the video, it is likely the gruesome execution is being broadcast on a loop in the city centre.
Even by ISIS' barbaric standards, the terror group's latest execution video - which lasts 22 minutes and was released yesterday afternoon - reached a truly depraved new low.
As with previous beheading videos featuring British executioner Jihadi John, the footage is characterised by its slick production values and graphics.
But unlike the others, it contains an added cinematic dimension designed to achieve unparalleled impact on the viewer - as if the horror of watching someone torched to death wasn't enough.
Sick: The short video begins with a short interview with a man who identifies himself as a fighter with the terror group (right), before going on include short exchanges with members of the local population (left)
Professional: The short video is filmed in a documentary style using HD cameras and contains logos and slogans associated with ISIS' self-styled media centres
Professional: The short video is filmed in a documentary style using HD cameras and contains logos and slogans associated with ISIS' self-styled media centres
Militants fighting for the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq yesteday released the video showing Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh being burned alive while locked in a cage
Militants fighting for the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq yesteday released the video showing Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh being burned alive while locked in a cage
ISIS blames the F-16 fighter pilot for burning houses - and killing babies - with airstrikes before he was captured in December.
The manner of his death is a symbolic show of strength to strike terror into 'non-believers' and encourage recruits or doubters within their ranks in equal measure.
This morning it emerged that the mother of the Jordanian pilot was reportedly admitted to hospital hours after the horrific video of her son's death emerged.
Issaf al-Kasasbeh is believed to have fainted after learning that her son, Moaz, had suffered such a barbaric killing, according to Jordanian media.
Dr Ali Hamiada, the director of Karak Hospital in Jordan, said her condition was stable.
News of her illness came as her husband Safi al-Kasasbeh demanded a swift and brutal retaliation to his son's murder.
Jordan followed through on its promise to execute two ISIS-linked prisoners, including a would-be female suicide bomber, but Mr al-Kasasbeh said this did not go far enough.
'I demand the revenge be greater than executing prisoners. I demand the ISIS organisation be annihilated,' he said.
Brutal: The footage, which is titled 'Healing the Believers Chests', shows the captured airman wearing an orange jumpsuit as a trail of petrol leading up to the cage is seen being set alight
Brutal: The footage, which is titled 'Healing the Believers Chests', shows the captured airman wearing an orange jumpsuit as a trail of petrol leading up to the cage is seen being set alight
Barbaric: An ISIS extremist lights a trail of petrol leading to the cage in which the 26-year-old stands 
Barbaric: An ISIS extremist lights a trail of petrol leading to the cage in which the 26-year-old stands 
Depraved: The flames reach the cage holding the helpless pilot. It is later flattened by a bulldozer
Depraved: The flames reach the cage holding the helpless pilot. It is later flattened by a bulldozer
Captured: Muath al-Kasasbeh (centre in white) was captured by the Islamic State after after crashing near its HQ in the Syrian city of Raqqa in December. ISIS is now believed to brutally murdered him
Captured: Muath al-Kasasbeh (centre in white) was captured by the Islamic State after after crashing near its HQ in the Syrian city of Raqqa in December. ISIS is now believed to brutally murdered him
Jordanian officials have told the devastated family of the 26-year-old (pictured) that they believed the footage to be genuine and that the man branded a ‘hero’ in his homeland was dead
Jordanian officials have told the devastated family of the 26-year-old (pictured) that they believed the footage to be genuine and that the man branded a 'hero' in his homeland was dead
Issaf Al-Kasasbeh, the mother of Jordanian pilot Lt Moaz al-Kaseasbeh is pictured during a protest  in Amman calling for her son's release last month. She has reportedly collapsed after learning of his brutal death at the hands of ISIS yesterday after a video of him being burned alive in a cage was released by the terror group
Issaf Al-Kasasbeh, the mother of Jordanian pilot Lt Moaz al-Kaseasbeh is pictured during a protest in Amman calling for her son's release last month. She has reportedly collapsed after learning of his brutal death at the hands of ISIS yesterday after a video of him being burned alive in a cage was released by the terror group
'This murderous organisation, made up of militants from all the world countries, is acting in barbaric ways, violating all the international laws, codes of ethics, and prisoners' conventions.
'That is why I strongly demand the government to swiftly take revenge for the blood of Moaz and the dignity of our country,' he told Al Jazeera.
Jordan had vowed a swift and lethal response and government officials this morning revealed that two prisoners, Sajida al-Rishawi and Ziad al-Karbouli, have already been hanged.
Al-Rishawi had been on death row for her role in a triple hotel bombing in the Jordanian capital Amman in 2005 that killed dozens.
The executions took place after gruesome footage emerged showing Jordanian pilot al-Kasasbeh being torched to death by his captors.
The gruesome death of 26-year-old Lt Al-Kaseasbeh, captured while participating in airstrikes by a U.S.-led coalition, sparked outrage and anti-Islamic State group demonstrations in Jordan.
Newspaper headlines warned Jordan 'will take revenge' for his slaying as King Abdullah II, a staunch Western ally, rushed back to his kingdom from Washington.
Inconsolable: Saif al-Kasaesbeh (centre), the father of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasaesbeh, is seen at the headquarters of the family's tribe in the city of Karak today as he mourns the loss of his son
Inconsolable: Saif al-Kasaesbeh (centre), the father of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasaesbeh, is seen at the headquarters of the family's tribe in the city of Karak today as he mourns the loss of his son
Relatives of Moaz al-Kasasbeh held pictures of him at a rally calling for his release early yesterday 
Relatives of Moaz al-Kasasbeh held pictures of him at a rally calling for his release early yesterday 
Anwar al-Tarawneh, the wife of Jordanian pilot, Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh, who is held by Islamic State group militants, holds a poster of him as she weeps during a protest in Amman, Jordan, Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2015. Al-Kaseasbeh was seized after his F-16 jet crashed near the Islamic State group's de facto capital, Raqqa, Syria, in December last year. (AP Photo/Raad Adayleh)
Grief: Anwar al-Tarawneh, the wife of Kasasbeh, appeared at a protest in Amman, Jordan yesterday morning calling for his release
Demanding a tough response: Angry Jordanians gather by a poster of pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh after hearing the news of his execution
Demanding a tough response: Angry Jordanians gather by a poster of pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh after hearing the news of his execution
Jordan has executed two ISIS-linked prisoners including Sajida al-Rishawi (pictured) hours after militants released a sickening video that showed captured Jordanian fighter pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh being burned alive
Jordan has executed two ISIS-linked prisoners including Sajida al-Rishawi  hours after militants released a sickening video that showed captured Jordanian fighter pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh (pictured) being burned alive
Jordan has executed two ISIS-linked prisoners including Sajida al-Rishawi (left) hours after militants released a sickening video that showed captured Jordanian fighter pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh (right) being burned alive
Taken away: An ambulance believed to be transporting the bodies of Iraqis Sajida al-Rishawi and Ziad al-Karbouli leaves Swaqa prison near Amman after the Al Qaeda militants were executed 
Taken away: An ambulance believed to be transporting the bodies of Iraqis Sajida al-Rishawi and Ziad al-Karbouli leaves Swaqa prison near Amman after the Al Qaeda militants were executed 
King Abdullah and President Barack Obama vowed in a hastily arranged White House meeting Tuesday not to let up in the fight against the Islamic State group.
Abdullah has portrayed the campaign against the extremists as a battle over values. In a speech later aired on Jordanian state television, he urged his countrymen to unite.
'It's the duty of all of us to stand united and show the real values of Jordanians in the face of these hardships,' Abdullah said.
U.S. Representative Duncan Hunter Jr, a California Republican, said after a meeting with congressional lawmakers and King Abdullah that the Jordanian monarch had been visibly angry and promised swift and certain retaliation against Islamic State group militants.
'They're starting more sorties tomorrow than they've ever had.
'They're starting tomorrow,' Hunter told the Washington Examiner in an interview published online Tuesday night.
Hunter added the king also said: 'The only problem we're going to have is running out of fuel and bullets.'
President Barack Obama (right) met late last night with  King Abdullah II  in the Oval Office of the White House, hours after the Moaz al-Kasasbeh was executed
President Barack Obama (right) met late last night with King Abdullah II in the Oval Office of the White House, hours after the Moaz al-Kasasbeh was executed
A bereaved man prays with verses of Quran at the Kasasbeh tribe society for Muath Al Kasasbeh, after hearing the news of his execution
A bereaved man prays with verses of Quran at the Kasasbeh tribe society for Muath Al Kasasbeh, after hearing the news of his execution
Activists took to the street in Amman to protest and wave their flags in defiance of the shocking video
Activists took to the street in Amman to protest and wave their flags in defiance of the shocking video
Angry Jordanians gather in Amman after hearing of Kasasbeh's barbaric murder at the hands of ISIS jihadists
Angry Jordanians gather in Amman after hearing of Kasasbeh's barbaric murder at the hands of ISIS 

After word spread that the pilot had been killed, dozens of people chanting slogans against the Islamic State group marched toward the royal palace to express their anger.
Waving a Jordanian flag, they chanted, 'Damn you, Daesh!' - using the Arabic acronym of the group - and 'We will avenge, we will avenge our son's blood.'
Al-Kaseasbeh is from a tribal area in southern Jordan's Karak district. The tribes are considered a mainstay of support for the monarchy, but the pilot's capture has strained that relationship.
During the weeks of uncertainty about the pilot's fate, members of his family had criticized the government's handling of the crisis and Jordan's participation in the anti-Islamic State group alliance.
However, the tone has changed since the announcement of his death, with family members speaking out against the militants and demanding revenge.

SAJIDA AL-RISHAWI, THE WOULD-BE SUICIDE BOMBER HANGED AT DAWN

Al-Rishawi, pictured in 2006, hailed from the city of Ramadi in Iraq'
Al-Rishawi, pictured in 2006, hailed from the city of Ramadi in Iraq'
Al-Rishawi, who was from the city of Ramadi in Iraq's militant stronghold of Anbar province, had close family ties to the Iraqi branch of al-Qaeda. 
Three of her brothers were killed during U.S. military operations in Anbar, perhaps providing her with a motive to engage in extremist activities, Associated Press reports. One of them was a lieutenant of al-Zarqawi.
On November 9, 2005, al-Rishawi and her newlywed husband, Ali al-Shamari, entered the ground-floor ballroom of the luxury Raddison SAS hotel in Amman, which was hosting hundreds gathered for a wedding reception. Al-Shamari set off his explosive belt, ripping through a wedding party with 300 guests in the ballroom. Al-Rishawi fled.
The bombing was one of three-near-simultaneous attacks on Amman hotels on that day and killed 60 people.
Al-Zarqawi later claimed responsibility for the attack and mentioned a woman being involved. Jordanian officials arrested her four days later at a safe house, one of two apartments the suicide team rented in a residential neighborhood. 
Several days later, al-Rishawi appeared on Jordanian state television, opening a body-length overcoat to reveal two crude explosive belts, one with RDX and the other with ball-bearings.
'My husband detonated (his bomb) and I tried to explode (mine) but it wouldn't,' al-Rishawi said during the three-minute television segment. 'People fled running and I left running with them.'
Later at the trial, al-Rishawi pleaded not guilty and said through her lawyer that she never tried to detonate her bomb and was forced to take part in the attack. But an explosives expert testified that the trigger mechanism on al-Rishawi's belt had jammed.
Al-Rishawi, who was in her 40s, was sentenced to death by hanging and an appeals court later ratified her sentence, describing her as 'guilty beyond doubt of possessing explosives and having had the intention and the will to carry out terrorist attacks whose outcome is destruction and death.'