'Conned' ISIS convert flees bloodthirsty militants who turn on him thinking he's a SPY
AN Islamic State (ISIS) fighter deserted the crazed terror group after militants turned on him thinking he was a SPY.
Ebrahim B, pictured, fled ISIS after they accused him of being a spy
The extremist, knwon as Ebrahim B, joined the hated group after being promised four wives, but was quickly locked up by other fighters after thinking he was a mole.
He was caged along with a another man, who had also been accused of being a spy. Ebrahim B made his escape after his fellow prisoner met a greusome end at the hands of Islamist fanatics.
ISIS terrorists beheaded him then brought the man's body into Ebrahim B's cell and propped it up next to him, balancing the dead man's severed head on his bloodied torso as a warning.
Reliving the moment he heard the man being executed, he chillingly said: "It was like the sound of a cat being run over."
The two ISIS defectors appeared alongside each other in a German court
The 26-year-old, who is a German national of Tunisian descent, has shed light on the terrible conditions foreigners travelling to join Isis have to endure.
He claims he was "conned" into joining the terrorist group with a promise of four wives and an expensive car, none of which materialised.
Speaking from a German prison cell, he revealed how he fled the militants' clutches and handed himself into western authorities after becoming dismayed at their barbaric methods.
Shortly after joining the group in August last year Ebrahim B, from Wolfsburg, was locked up in a blood-soaked cell in an Isis "execution centre" in Syria.
Eventually a recruitment officer vouched for him and he was able to make his escape shortly afterwards when he was tasked with taking an injured militant to Turkey for medical treatment.
He handed himself into the police there and was extradited back to Germany, where he will appear in court today alongside a fellow ISIS-returnee named Ayoub B, aged 27. Both men are charged with being part of a terrorist organisation.
Ayoub B covered his face as he arrived at the regional court in Celle, Germany
In an interview from his cell Ebrahim B claimed he was tricked into joining ISIS by Yassin Ousaiffi, who at the time was a recruitment officer at Wolfsburg’s Ditib Mosque.
He said many young Muslims realise when they reach Syria that ISIS has nothing to do with Islam, and added that many are now trying to escape from the group's tyrannical rule.
As many as 22,000 foreigners - up to 1,000 of them British - are thought to be in Syria and Iraq fighting for the terrorist organisation.
They are lured to the Middle East with promises of high salaries and arranged marriages, but are often confronted with dismal conditions from which they cannot escape.
ISIS has executed hundreds of fighters who have tried to desert its ranks in the last 18 months.