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Mother of al-Shabab's Thomas Evans says 'world has fallen apart' | |
(35 minutes later) | |
The mother of a British man killed while fighting for Islamist militant group al-Shabab in Kenya has told the BBC her "whole world has fallen apart". | The mother of a British man killed while fighting for Islamist militant group al-Shabab in Kenya has told the BBC her "whole world has fallen apart". |
Sally Evans, from Buckinghamshire, said a journalist had phoned to tell them Muslim convert Thomas, 25, had died. | |
Her other son Michael said that when he looked on Twitter, the first thing he found was a picture of Thomas's body. | |
"We remember him as being my brother, your son," he told the BBC. "But to everyone else he's just a terrorist." | "We remember him as being my brother, your son," he told the BBC. "But to everyone else he's just a terrorist." |
Kenyan officials have confirmed that Thomas Evans was killed on Sunday when al-Shabab fighters attacked a military base in the north of the country. | |
Militants armed with AK47s and grenades raided the base in Lamu County, close to the Somali border, and then stormed a nearby village. | |
Eleven gunmen were killed in total and two Kenyan soldiers also died. | |
'Twisted views' | 'Twisted views' |
Evans, who had changed his name to Abdul Hakim, contacted his family in 2012 to say he had travelled to Somalia to join the militant group. | |
At least 50 British citizens are believed to have joined al-Shabab, an al-Qaeda affiliate based in Somalia, which has been behind a series of high-profile attacks in Kenya and Somalia. | |
Ms Evans, from Wooburn Green, said she would remember her son as "the little boy who had a bright future before he went down the path he went down". | |
She said he had met "some people with some very twisted, warped ideas of Islam" in the local area to begin with, and was later influenced by online material. | She said he had met "some people with some very twisted, warped ideas of Islam" in the local area to begin with, and was later influenced by online material. |
"I'm very angry that they were prepared to put my son on the line but they are still here," she said. "They are not brave enough to go out there themselves." | "I'm very angry that they were prepared to put my son on the line but they are still here," she said. "They are not brave enough to go out there themselves." |
Michael Evans said his brother had changed from the "fun and loving" person he had grown up with. | |
At the age of 21, Evans announced he was moving to Kenya and bought a single plane ticket. | |
He was turned back at the airport by police, but later sold his CDs and other possessions and told his family he was travelling to Egypt. | |
In August 2011, police told the family they had lost track of him. The following January he called and said he had joined al-Shabab. | |
Ms Evans repeated her claim that the British authorities had not done enough to stop her son from travelling to Egypt. | |
"If they had suspicions, why didn't they involve me? | |
"We could have worked together to save him and I wouldn't be in this situation now," she said. | |
"They should have taken his passport. If I'd have known, I would have taken his passport but when they let him fly to Egypt, I thought there was nothing to worry about." | |
She said she did not know who to turn to for advice and help. | |
"He would never tell me what he was doing," Ms Evans said. | |
"He did say if the worst thing happened, I wasn't to cry because he would be going to paradise, but somehow I cannot celebrate that." |