Mahmood, educated at an exclusive private school, used a now-defunct Twitter account to promote militant terrorism, praising those responsible for the Boston marathon bomb and the massacre at Fort Hood, the Daily Record newspaper reported.
"If our daughter who had all the chances and freedoms in life could become a bedroom radical, then it is possible for this to happen to any family,” her parents said in a statement issued by their lawyer. “We were horrified when we heard that our daughter had become radicalized and moved to Aleppo in Syria. We always had high hopes for her and would have loved for her to become a doctor and save lives. She may believe that the jihadists of ISIS are her new family but they are not and they are simply using her.”
They added: “We still love you but you now have to put your family first as you betrayed us, your community and the people of Scotland when you took this step.” Since the civil war in Syria erupted in 2011, numerous reports have surfaced of Western women traveling to marry Islamist fighters.Through a statement read by their solicitor, they said she was "well integrated into society" and was brought up with "with love and affection in a happy home". So what makes a young woman like Aqsa leave Scotland to become a Jihadi bride?
What was Aqsa like before she left?
Aqsa, who has one older brother and two younger sisters, grew up in the affluent Glasgow suburb of Pollokshields and was privately educated at Craigholme School. Her parents described her as "always a very sweet, peaceful, intelligent child and inquisitive about everything". Her friends told the Scottish Daily Record she was a fan of Coldplay and Harry Potter, and even had a crush on the film star Zac Efron, before she began to take more of an interest in Islam at the age of 15.
She later spent increasing amounts of time in her bedroom, apparently interacting on radical Muslim chat forums. After disappointing results in her Highers, her parents moved her to Shawlands Academy. She subsequently began a course in diagnostic radiography at Glasgow Caledonian University, but dropped out to go to Syria last November.
How did she get to Syria?
Aqsa was reported missing in November but contacted her parents after arriving in Syria and had kept in touch through social media until Tuesday when it emerged in the press that she was involved with Islamic State. It is understood that she travelled through Turkey to Aleppo in Syria with a Canadian Muslim woman known only as Umm Haritha.
What has she been doing in Syria?
Aqsa and Umm are believed to have married jihadist fighters soon after arriving in Aleppo and settled in the small town of Manbij near the Turkish border with a third female British Muslim. Aqsa has allegedly been using Twitter and an online blog to encourage people in Britain to follow the example of the Boston Marathon bombers and the murderers of British soldier Lee Rigby.
"Follow the examples of your brothers from Woolwich, Texas and Boston," she is believed to have tweeted under the name Umm Layth. "If you cannot make it to the battlefield, then bring the battlefield to yourself". The BBC says the account was set up last August but disappeared this week when her name was linked to Islamic State.
Why did Aqsa go to Syria?
Her parents say she was "concerned and upset" by reports of the Syrian conflict and had told them she wanted to help. "There is no smoking gun, no family member, no fundamentalist preacher that can be blamed for her radicalisation," they said yesterday. "Aqsa, like many young people in our community, was naturally angry and frustrated at the loss of innocent life in the Middle East but this is not the way to help."
Is she the only British woman to join Islamic State?
No, security experts believe at least 50 British women and girls have joined Islamic State in Syria, according to Jamie Dettmer at the Daily Beast, but it is possible the number is higher. Dettmer says many male and female jihadi recruits come from middle-income backgrounds and are often fairly well educated.
"What is distinguishing Isis from its rival al-Qaeda is the increased role the group is giving women as online recruiters and as enforcers of Sharia religious law in the swath of territory Isis now controls in eastern Syria and western Iraq," he says. "The fear is that the Western women may take on an even more active role as suicide bombers."
Dettmer says it is "impossible to say" how many more "bedroom radicals" like Aqsa may be dreaming of such exploits. Yesterday Aqsa's parents warned: "If our daughter, who had all the chances and freedom in life, could become a bedroom radical, then it is possible for this to happen to any family."
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