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UK acts to prevent doctors joining ISIS

A British delegation, including an imam from London, has visited Sudan in an attempt to stop British doctors studying in the country from joining the ISIS group in strife-torn Syria.

A British delegation, including an imam from London, has visited Sudan in an attempt to stop British doctors studying in the country from joining the ISIS group in strife-torn Syria.

The terrorist group has been seeking out foreign medics to help at its hospitals in Syria and at least 17 British doctors are believed to have joined the group’s so-called “health ministry” in 2015 alone.

According to a report in the Observer, the British foreign office is coordinating efforts to prevent more of its citizens travelling to join ISIS from Khartoum’s University of Medical Sciences and Technology, the main source of these medics in Syria.

The newspaper reported that a second group of UK doctors who left Sudan for Syria have joined up with members of an earlier group who travelled to join ISIS in March 2015.

According to family sources, the second group of five British citizens, including two brothers from Leicester, are understood to have joined up with 20-year-old Rowan Kamal Zine El Abidine, a prominent member of the nine-member British medical staff who journeyed from Khartoum earlier.

Concerns that more sleeper cells of British doctors in Khartoum are planning to go to Syria have prompted some parents to reportedly withdraw their children from the University of Medical Sciences and Technology, and has triggered considerable unease among UK diplomats and the Sudanese intelligence services, the newspaper claims.

A UK foreign office spokesperson said: “Since the cases of British nationals travelling from Sudan to Syria, the British embassy in Khartoum remains in contact with the University of Medical Sciences and Technology to address these concerns.

“We continue to support the university in its efforts to promote dialogue around these issues.”

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