British hacker 'masterminding plan to teach jihadists how to steal from bank accounts of rich and famous to fund terror campaign'
- Junaid Hussain, 20, from Birmingham, is feared to be behind cyber attacks
- He was jailed in 2012 for hacking personal information from Tony Blair
- Last year went to Syria to fight, and posts extremist messages online
- Islamic State has amassed huge war chest from plundering banks and oil
- Security sources say he is passing on his knowledge to other fighters
- Banks say they are constantly vigilant against attacks from criminal groups
A
British jihadist fighting with the Islamic State in Iraq is feared to be
behind a cyber plot to empty British bank accounts to fund terrorism in
the Middle East.
Junaid
Hussain, 20, escaped to Syria last year while on police bail, and has
been posting extremist messages on social media pledging to conquer the
world and kill infidels.
Hussain,
who is originally from Birmingham, is pictured online posing with a
scarf over his face and a rifle in his hands, and tweets behind the
alias Abu Hussain al-Britani.
Jihadist: Junaid Hussain, who tweets from Iraq under an alias, has posed with a rifle and posted extremist messages online
He
was jailed in 2012 for stealing personal information from Tony Blair,
and is thought to be putting his hacking skills to use adding to the
militants' huge war chest.
According to reports in the Daily Mirror,
British financial institutions are aware of the attacks and working
overtime to prevent their customers' funds being extracted.
A source told the paper: 'The hackers are targeting the accounts of the rich and famous, VIP clients of banks and big businesses.
'This
is an international fraud on an unprecedented scale and the result
could be a bottomless pit of money to fund their campaign of terror.'
Court case: Abu Hussain, 20, pictured
above at Southwark Crown Court, was jailed for six months in 2012 for
stealing personal information from Tony Blair and posting it online
Hussain
has not directly mentioned hacking in his stream of Islamist posts, but
a fellow fighter boasted of being bought pizza using celebrity credit
card details acquired by a jihadist hacker.
When
the fanatics swept across Iraq this summer, conquering huge swathes of
the country, they also captured a central bank in Mosul, which they
looted for hundreds of millions of pounds.
The
huge windfall immediately made them the world's richest terrorist
organisation, and they have been expanding their financial clout as they
storm across the country.
A
spokesman for the British Bankers' Association told the MailOnline that
banks are always vigilant against attacks from all over the world,
launched by anyone from petty criminals to major organisations.
A spokesman said: 'Protecting
their customers' money is the banks' number one priority. That's why
they spend hundreds of millions of pounds a year hiring cyber security
experts to combat these kind of threats.
'If
you as a customer fall victim to fraud through no fault of your own you
are almost certain to have your money quickly reimbursed.'
A
spokesman for GCHQ, the government's intelligence and security
organisation, declined to comment on attacks from the Islamic State.
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