- Nasser Muthana, 20, suggests the women have been smuggled into Syria
- Ex-Cardiff schoolboy previously featured in chilling ISIS recruitment video
- Appeared with friend Reyaad Khan attempting to recruit Western Muslims
- Muthana has also warned the UK to be afraid of his new bomb-making skills
A picture tweeted by Islamic State recruit Reyaad Khan, who is from Cardiff
A British jihadist made sick claims on Twitter that Islamic State militants are holding hundreds of Iraqi women as slaves in Syria.
Former Cardiff schoolboy Nasser Muthana appeared to refer to reports that 300 women were snatched from the Yazidi community near Mount Sinjar, where ISIS cornered thousands of refugees in a ten-day siege.
The tweet also alluded to claims that the women were intended to be given to young jihadists as wives.
It read: 'I can confirm that we have hundreds of yazidi slave women now in Syria, how about that for news!'
Sick: British jihadist Nasser Muthana posted this claim on his Twitter account saying that he and other Islamic State fighters had captured hundreds of Yazidi and were holding them hostage in Syria
Jihadist: Nasser Muthana is a 20-year-old former Cardiff schoolboy who featured prominently in the Islamic State's first professionally produced English language propaganda video
When his claims were questioned by a known sympathiser, he sounded more sincere.
Da Masked Avenger asked him: 'In all seriousness. What's the truth of this matter?'
Muthana replied: 'I'm not lying.'
The message was posted two days ago, but has since been deleted and his claims cannot be independently verified.
Yesterday, fears were growing for the captured women amid claims they would be used to bear children to break up the ancient sect's bloodline.
Before: Former Cardiff schoolboy Nasser Muthana uploaded images with the stark warning: 'Army base buildings before and after, I'm getting good with these bombs'
After: The young jihadist, who describes himself on Twitter as a 'soldier of the Islamic State', said last month the UK government should be 'afraid' of his bomb-making skills
The minority group is originally Aryan and has retained a fairer complexion, blonde hair and blue eyes by only marrying within the community.
But in a furious bid to convert all non-Muslims, ISIS jihadists have vowed to impregnate the hostages.
Addressing the kidnapping, Adnan Kochar, chairman of the Kurdish Cultural Centre in London, told MailOnline: 'The Kurds and Yazidis are originally Aryans.
'But because the Yazidis are such a closed community they have retained a fairer complexion, blonder hair and bluer eyes. They don't marry non-Yazidis.
'ISIS have taken around 300 women from Sinjar to give to jihadists to marry and make pregnant to have a Muslim child. If they can't kill all Yazidis, they will try to smash the blond bloodline.'
Muthana - who featured in a chilling ISIS recruitment video - has been a prolific user of social media in recent months, posting horrific pictures of mutilated Iraqi soldiers and other taunting claims about the Islamic State's uprising in Iraq.
Threat: Nasser Muthana posted a message on Twitter last month warning that the UK government should be afraid of him returning to the country with his new bomb making skills
He has previously warned that ISIS fighters would slaughter any Yazidi men they captured in northern Iraq and would enslave their women and children.
'Kuffar [non-believers] are afraid we will slaughter Yazidis, our deen [religious path] is clear we will kill their men, take their women and children as slaves insha Allah,' he posted on Twitter.
He also posted a message on Twitter warning that the UK government should be afraid of him returning to the country with his new bomb making skills.
The 20-year-old's boast about the Yazidi women comes just days after he uploaded before and after images of a military building being destroyed by one of homemade bombs.
Friends: Reyaad Khan (left), who is also from Cardiff, appeared alongside Muthana (right) in the ISIS propaganda video, urging other young Muslims in the West to join them in jihad
They appeared on his new Twitter page under the username Abul Muthanna@abulmuthanna313 after deleting his previous profile last month.
He was reportedly unhappy with the high levels of attention it received following his appearance in the Islamic State's recruitment video.
Formerly a prospective medical student, Muthana was joined in Syria by his younger brother Aseel, 17, who has now spoken of his willingness to die fighting for ISIS.
The Muthana brothers, who grew up in Cardiff after their father moved there from Yemen as a teenager, are among hundreds of young men from Britain who have flown to Syria to join the rebels.
Their friend Reyaad Khan, 20, also from Cardiff, said he had 'fireworks' for the U.S. if they returned to fight in Iraq.
'YOU ARE NOT TOO YOUNG TO DIE': THE BRITISH JIHADISTS BIDDING TO RECRUIT BOYS AS YOUNG AS 15 ON SOCIAL MEDIA SITES
Reyaad Khan and Nasser Muthana are among the British jihadists fighting with ISIS in Iraq that are using social networking sites to lure young Muslim teenagers from the UK into joining the Islamic State fanatics.
The extremists, who boast of ‘slaughtering’ innocent Yazidis and ‘taking their women as slaves’, are advising 15-year-olds that they are ‘not too young’ to die fighting for Allah.
Asked by a British 18-year-old girl if she is too young to join, one of them replied: ‘I know sisters younger than you. I heard of maybe 16-year-olds being here from UK. You aren’t too young.’
Before they fled: Jihadists Reyaad Khan and Nasser Muthana (circled) hand out food to the needy in Cardiff last year. Both have been tweeting about their involvement with IS while on the front line
They are informing their British ‘brothers and sisters’ every day how to make their way to Iraq, claiming they are ‘ordered’ to defy their parents and fight jihad.
The British IS fighters, who refer to themselves as the ‘Baadiya Boys’ after their original base in Syria, include Khan and Muthana.
The former Catholic college students have been joined on the frontline by young Muslim men and women from across the UK, including a group of five friends from Portsmouth, two of whom have already been killed.
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