Ashamed:
Jaseem Emwazi (left), father of Jihadi John, described his killer son as
'a dog, an animal'. Mohammed Emwazi, is seen right in a 1996 school
photograph
Jihadi John's father has disowned his terrorist son in an emotional outburst, calling him 'a dog, an animal and a terrorist'
.
Jaseem
Emwazi blasted his killer son Mohammed - who was last week revealed as
the notorious Islamic State executioner - and said: 'To hell with my
son'.
In
an phone call to a colleague yesterday, Jaseem is said to have broken
down in tears and confessed he was 'ashamed' of his son.
Abu Meshaal, 40, who works with Jaseem in a supermarket depot in rural Kuwait, told the Telegraph that
Mr Emwazi disowned his son when he telephoned his family to tell them
he was fleeing to Syria in 2013 and to beg for their forgiveness.
Mr
Meshaal revealed: 'Mohammed called his father and said 'I'm going to
Syria to fight jihad, please release me and forgive me for everything'.
Jassem said, 'F*** you. I hope you die before you arrive in Syria'.'
Jaseem
is said to be too ashamed to return to his job as a storekeeper or be
seen in public after his son's identity was revealed last week.
A
second colleague - who spoke anonymously to Kuwait's Qabbas newspaper -
said: 'All I know is that he was talking about his son whose behaviour
he was not able to control. He was so tired and kept on repeating that
my son is not a good son.'
Other appalled relatives of Emwazi condemned his actions and said they would welcome his death.
A
Kuwaiti cousin, who would not give his name, said: 'We hate him. We
hope he will be killed soon. This will be good news for our family.'
Yesterday,
it was revealed that Emwazi's mother Ghania screamed out in shock when
she realised that her son was Jihadi John after watching a beheading
video.
She
was described as 'absolutely devastated' when she discovered he had
fled to Syria, and a friend said she had been 'crying ever since. She
keeps asking her friends to pray for her son, pray for him to come back
and so on.'
Jaseem was a member of the 'Bidoun' group of stateless people denied citizenship by countries in the Gulf.
He
worked as a police officer in Kuwait until he found his loyalties
questioned after Saddam Hussein's 1990-1 invasion of the Gulf State
because his family was originally from Iraq.
His family was reportedly accused of collaborating with the Iraqi army during the seven-month occupation.
Mr
Emwazi took his wife and his children to live in London in 1993.He was
awarded British nationality in 2002 and returned to Kuwait the next
year, the Arab Times reported today.
Evil:
Mohammed Emwazi (left) was last week unmasked as Jihadi John (right),
the killer who carried out a series of beheadings of Western hostages in
violent videos
It
is not known when he settled in his native country, and he is thought
to have regularly travelled back and forth between the UK and Kuwait.
Local sources say he has been living and working in Kuwait for at least two years.
MailOnline today visited a house in the dusty Kuwaiti suburb of Al-Ayoun said to be linked to the Emwazis.
But
a Kuwaiti woman who answered the door said she had never heard of the
family and insisted she had lived there for many years.
Meanwhile,
it was also revealed today that Jihadi John is understood to have taken
a bride in Syria after becoming Islamic State's most feared
executioner.
A family friend said the masked butcher is believed to have married since joining the terror group in 2013.
It is unclear whether the British intelligence services are aware who his bride is.
But
once she is identified, security chiefs will be desperate to
investigate her and her family's background for clues that could help
them locate the feared terrorist.
Married: A recent film is believed to
show Emwazi shortly after he arrived in Syria in 2013. It is now
understood he married whilst in the war-torn country
Emwazi,
from Queen's Park, north-west London, was born in Kuwait in 1988 but
moved to Britain with his parents and younger siblings in 1993 after the
Gulf War.
He went to school and university in the UK before returning to Kuwait to work in 2009.
While
living in the Gulf State, he became engaged to a local woman and found a
job as a salesman for a computer software company.
Emwazi
was banned from re-entering Kuwait in May 2010 after the British
authorities raised concerns about his links to extremism.
He claimed this cost him his job and his fiancée in the Gulf State.
A family friend said Emwazi was thought to have married after joining IS in Syria.
'I
heard from a few friends that he had gone to fight, and when I asked a
family member about it, she said, 'Oh he's moved to Syria to work and
has gotten married',' he told The Times.
Killer: A man thought to be Jihadi
John proclaims allegiance to a terror group in footage filmed in 2013.
The video is thought to be the first known appearance by the executioner
now unmasked as Mohammed Emwazi
A video emerged this week which is believed to show Emwazi ranting on camera shortly after he arrived in Syria from the UK.
The
footage is of two bands of fanatical fighters joining forces in 2013
under the command of notorious terrorist Omar al-Shishani.
At
the front stands a man thought to be Emwazi - the west Londoner last
week unmasked as the killer of Western hostages in a series of videos
which have shocked the world.
New
tapes also revealed today that the killer told MI5 he was a 'moderate
Muslim' as he desperately tried explain why he had been picked up in
terror-plagued east Africa.
Cage,
the campaign group criticised for blaming the ISIS killer's actions on
Britain, released a recording of a 2009 interview they carried out with
Emwazi.
Home: The Emwazi family have left
their house in north London and are believed to have been living in
Kuwait for the last two years
In
the recording, Emwazi tells how he was questioned by British security
services after he was flown home from Tanzania suspected of trying to
join Somali terror group al-Shabaab.
The ISIS killer complained that he was being 'threatened' by MI5 and moaned that agents were 'putting words in his mouth'.
But
just three years after claiming he harboured no extremist tendencies,
Emwazi appeared in Syria beheading Western hostages in violent Islamic
State videos.