The leader of the extremist group that has overrun parts of Iraq and Syria has called on Muslims around the world to flock to territories under his control to fight and build an Islamic state.
In a recording posted online on Tuesday, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared he wants to turn the enclave his fighters have carved out in the heart of the Middle East into a magnet for militants. He also presented himself as the leader of Islam worldwide, urging Muslims everywhere to rise up against oppression.
The audio message came two days after al-Baghdadi’s group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, unilaterally declared the establishment of an Islamic state, or caliphate, in the land it controls. It also proclaimed al-Baghdadi the caliph and demanded that all Muslims around the world pledge allegiance to him.
His group’s forceful seizure of territory and its grand pronouncement of a caliphate have transformed the Iraqi-born al-Baghdadi into one of the leading figures of the global jihadi movement, perhaps even eclipsing al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahri.
The blitz across Iraq has pushed the death toll there to levels unseen since the worst sectarian bloodletting in 2006 during the US occupation.
The UN said on Tuesday that more than 2,400 Iraqis were killed last month. That tally would make last month the deadliest in Iraq since at least April 2005, when The Associated Press began tracking casualty figures.
After melting away in the initial onslaught, Iraq’s military and security forces have regrouped and managed to stem the tide at the outskirts of Shiite-dominated regions. However, the country’s political leaders have been unable to bridge their differences to confront the militant threat and failed again in parliament on Tuesday.
In his 19-minute address, al-Baghdadi said the Islamic state is a land for all Muslims regardless of nationality, telling them it “will return your dignity, might, rights and leadership.”
“It is a state where the Arab and non-Arab, the white man and black man, the Easterner and Westerner are all brothers,” he said, trying to broaden his base beyond the Middle East. “Muslims, rush to your state. Yes, it is your state. Rush, because Syria is not for the Syrians and Iraq is not for the Iraqis. The Earth is Allah’s.”
To help build the state, he appealed to those with practical skills — academics, judges, doctors, engineers, former soldiers and people with administrative expertise — to “answer the dire need of the Muslims for them.”
He urged militants to escalate fighting in the holy month of Ramadan, which began on Sunday.
“In this virtuous month or in any other month, there is no deed better than jihad in the path of Allah, so take advantage of this opportunity and walk the path of your righteous predecessors,” he said. “So, to arms, to arms soldiers of the Islamic state, fight, fight.”
In an appeal to Muslims worldwide, he said: “The time has come for you to free yourself from the shackles of weakness and stand in the face of tyranny.”
The message was posted on militant Web sites where the group has issued statements before and the voice resembled that on other recordings said to be by al-Baghdadi, who has rarely been photographed or appeared in public.
Al-Baghdadi’s group has already attracted jihadi fighters from across the Arab world, the Caucasus, and extremists from Europe and some from the US. In a few short years, the organization has been transformed from an al-Qaeda affiliate in Iraq into a transnational military force that has conquered and held a massive chunk of territory.
Al-Qaeda’s al-Zawahri expelled al-Baghdadi from the terrorist network earlier this year.
In the past year alone, al-Baghdadi’s group — which has changed its name to simply the Islamic State, dropping the reference to Iraq and the Levant — has managed to effectively erase the Syria-Iraq border and lay the foundations of its proto-state.
The Sunni insurgents’ advance in Iraq appears to have crested, at least for now, as it reaches Shiite-majority areas, where resistance is tougher, and as it seeks to consolidate its control of the territory already in hand, but the group has continued to advance in Syria. On Tuesday, it captured the town of Boukamal near the Iraqi border. Its fighters advanced toward Shuheil, to the northwest, a stronghold of its al-Qaeda-linked rival, the Nusra Front.
As fighting intensified in the area on Tuesday, thousands of Shuheil’s residents were seen fleeing the town, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
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