Abdulrahman Aghlio..The fall of the photographer of the massacre of the "Copts of Egypt" in Libya
In the western desert, on the border with Egypt, the
Libyan security forces recorded a new victory over Daesh. After their success
in arresting Hisham Ashmawi, another terrorist, can be considered as the
"eye of the camera" in the terrorist organization was killed and he
is Abdul Rahman Ali Aghlio.
The Libyan terrorist Abdel Rahman Ali Aghlio, known
as Abu Mohammed, became famous after a video clip showing the slaughter of 21
Egyptian Copts seized by the terrorist organization in Libya three years ago.
Agholio was born in 1997 and when he was 15 years
old, his family was told that he was missing, and they published his
photographs in 2012. But he appeared after he was recruited by the terrorist
militias of Misrata and was involved in attacking the city « Bani Walid
»Libyan.
According to available information about Aglio, he
worked under the command of Abu Omar al-Jazrawi, nicknamed "the governor
of Tripoli", who was killed in 2016 in the Libyan city of Sirte.
Last year, the Libyan Attorney-General, Siddiq
al-Sour, arrested an Egyptian photographer who murdered the Egyptian Copts in
Libya, which took place behind the Al-Mahary Hotel in Sirte. Confirming that
the burial places of the victims were identified, and then the governments of
Egypt and Libya handed over the bodies to the families of the victims.
Al-Sour said in previous statements: Most of those
involved in the membership of Daesh on the Libyan territory, are not new to
terrorism. They are leaders of al Qaeda, founded by Osama bin Laden, and his assistant
Ayman al-Zawahri. Some of them managed to infiltrate and escape to Iraq, to join
the organization there.
In December 2017, the Libyan Anti-Crime Department
published the confessions of a member of an organization called Hisham
al-Awakli, known as the dinosaur, who admitted to being one of the individuals
involved in the Copts massacre.
According to the dinosaur's confessions, the crime
of slaughtering the Egyptian Copts was filmed under the supervision of Abu Adel
Aziz al-Anbari, the head of the photography team, who used cameras and modern
equipment brought by a man named Abu Abdullah Ahmad al-Hamali from Turkey via
the airport in Tripoli.
According to investigations conducted in Libya, the
recruitment of Daesh elements in Libya, started by the Libyan Hassan
al-Salihin Balarj, nicknamed "Abu hbeiba", who was imprisoned in Iraq
in 2005, and returned to Libya in 2012, to establish what is known as the
"Tawheed and Jihad" City of Derna.
Tawhid and Jihad joined Daesh and set up Abu Habiba
as the emir of the organization's branch in Libya. According to the
investigations, Abu hbeiba received envoys to Libya in 2014 and took up
the position of Emir of Armaments until his death in Sirte in 2016.
Investigations also revealed that the most
nationalities that joined Daesh in Libya were Tunisia, Egypt and Sudan, with
more than 100 individuals and 50 to 100 people from countries such as Senegal,
Gambia, Chad, Niger, Ghana and Eritrea , Mali and Somalia.
The number of people who joined the ranks of Daesh
from Saudi Arabia, Palestine, Morocco, Mauritania, Yemen and Algeria ranges
from 10 to 50, while the number of those joining the organization from Iraq,
America, Syria, Qatar, Nepal, Burundi, France , And Jordan, between 1 and 10
people.
Daesh took control of Sirte in June 2015, and the
organization regularly portrayed the city as its main base outside Syria and
Iraq. In December 2016, pro-government fighters succeeded in regaining control
of the city and ousting the organization's militants.