Photo: Photos from the video
Dagestani Azamat Aivazov in an interview with RT he said how he became an IS fighter (banned in the Russian Federation) on his way to Britain. The man is now in No. 1 Prison in Makhachkala. Aivazov calls himself a “victim of the global political game.”
Aivazov left Russia in 2011 with his family. They settled in Leicester, Britain. I once visited my relatives living in Germany. Upon his return, he was detained by people who introduced themselves as members of the British special services. They acted as recruiters – asking for Muslim spying in the Leicester Mosque. More serious proposals soon followed – to go to the Middle East to “work” as a spy.
Azamat was told he would not have to fight for the gunmen. They promised an evacuation in three months. But once Aivazov was in Syria, he became involved in hostilities against Kurdish militias. He couldn't escape. After a while, the curators broke all the shackles. “I thought the British had 'written me off,'” the man said.
As soon as the drone hit the militants, Aivazov was the only survivor, trying to leave Syria for several months. , he came to Europe, but was arrested there and extradited to Russia.
“As a result, these special services got what they needed … I later realized they would not pull me out,” the man added./p>