RIYADH: A Syrian professor at a Saudi Arabian university has disappeared and joined the Islamic State group fighting US-backed forces in her homeland, a newspaper reported yesterday.
Al-Hayat quoted Ibrahim
Al Khaldi, the spokesman for the University of Dammam, as saying Iman Mustafa Al Boga had resigned for unknown reasons.
It quoted from her Facebook page, which says she is “moving around in the north of Syria”.
“I was Daesh even before Daesh existed,” she says in another post, using the Arabic acronym for the group which has been accused of atrocities including crucifixions and beheadings. “And I have always known that there is no solution to the problems faced by Muslims but in this jihad,” Boga added.
The kingdom is seeking to deter youth from becoming jihadists after Syria’s conflict attracted hundreds of Saudis.
Riyadh introduced in February jail terms of up to 20 years for citizens who travel to fight abroad, and the kingdom’s top cleric has called IS and Al Qaeda “enemy number one” of Islam.
Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al Sheikh has urged Muslim young people not to be influenced by “calls for jihad... on perverted principles”. Muslims around the world have denounced the militants. “I left my dear university, my fancy car, my big house and large salary”, to be free from “sinful laws of the tyrants that suffocate the ummah”, Boga posted on October 14. She later added that she had travelled without assistance from anyone. “We do not know the reason behind her resignation”, Al-Hayat quoted the university spokesman as saying.
The university “is keen to protect its students from ideas and methods that could be a danger to them, and could question their beliefs, traditions and customs”, he added. AFP