{UAH} 'It's Allah's will'': ISIS terrorists' who decapitated two Scandinavian women brand them 'enemies of God'
'It's Allah's will'
'It's Allah's will': Fanatics branded two Scandinavian women the 'enemies of God' as they filmed themselves decapitating one of the tourists in Morocco – 'and posted video pledging allegiance to ISIS'
- Dane Louisa Jespersen, 24, and Norwegian Maren Ueland, 28, were backpacking
- They were found dead near the village of Imlil in Morocco's High Atlas mountains
- 'ISIS fanatics' call the women 'enemies of God' in a clip of one of the murders
- Killings can be connected to ISIS, the Danish intelligence said this morning
- Three men have been arrested on a bus in Marrakesh over the gruesome killings
Suspected ISIS terrorists branded two Scandinavian women the 'enemies of God' as they filmed themselves decapitating one of the tourists in Morocco.
Maren Ueland, 28, from Norway, and Louisa Vesterager Jespersen, 24, from Denmark, were found dead near the village of Imlil in Morocco's High Atlas mountains on Monday.
A video showing the murder of one of the women has been recognised as genuine, Danish intelligence service said today adding that the killings can be connected to ISIS.
Men in the gruesome clip can be heard shouting 'it's Allah's will' while there are claims that the words 'this is for Syria' were used, in an apparent reference to Western bombing missions in the war-torn country.
Separate footage has emerged today showing four men suspected of carrying out the attack pledging their alliance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Sitting in front of a black and white flag, one is seen brandishing a knife as they condemn 'destruction caused by the warplanes of the Crusader alliance'. They also appear to taunt Morocco's intelligence service, saying 'where is your knowledge? For here we are...'
This morning, a series of fearsome knives were found on a bus in Marrakesh as three suspects were arrested over the atrocity. Yesterday, a fourth man was held, suspected of belonging to an Islamic extremist group.

Online footage has emerged appearing to show four men suspected of launching the attack pledging their alliance to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. One of them can be seen brandishing a knife


ISIS terrorists are suspected of killing two Scandinavian women - Maren Ueland and Louisa Vesterager Jespersen - in Morocco. It comes as police announced three suspects had been arrested on a bus in Marrakesh (pictured)

Three fugitive suspects have been arrested in Marrakesh after an intensive manhunt. Pictured is one of the four men held over the murders

A picture has emerged showing a series of large knives the suspected killers wielded


Maren Ueland (right), 28, from Norway, and Louisa Vesterager Jespersen (left), 24, from Denmark, were found dead near the village of Imlil in Morocco's High Atlas mountains on Monday

Today's three arrests were made at a bus station in Marrakesh after a trader alerted police when he saw the knives they were carrying as they tried to buy water. Investigators are pictured next to the bus where the men were arrested
Ms Ueland and Ms Vesterager Jespersen, who were studying to be outdoor guides at a Norwegian university, were spotted with three men in Marrakesh before heading to the Atlas mountains to hike.
All four suspects are reportedly between the ages of 25 and 33.
Three have been identified by their initials and two of them have been pictured wearing skullcaps and heavy beards.
'RA', from the small village of Douar el Caïd, outside Marrakesh, was born in 1985 and works as a salesman, officials said.
The second suspect, 'AE', a carpenter born in 1991, lives in the Azzouzia district of Marrakesh.
The third, 'OA', born in 1993, lives in the Derb Zeroual neighbourhood of Marrakesh. No employment details were given.

Moroccan police officers waiting outside a morgue in the capital Marrakesh, ahead of the transportation of the bodies of the two murdered Scandinavian hikers to the airport

The bodies of Danish student Louisa Vesterager Jespersen, 24, and 28-year-old Maren Ueland from Norway were found on December 17, after the two friends had pitched their tent at an isolated mountain site two hours' walk from the tourist village of Imlil
Today's three arrests were made at a bus station in Marrakesh after a trader alerted police when he saw the knives they were carrying as they tried to buy water.
Police boarded the bus and seized four knives, including blades of machete size, as the bus was leaving to travel to the southern seaside town of Agadir.
The ticket inspector on the bus, Abdulrahim, said: 'We came from Azilal and stopped in Marrakesh before continuing to Agadir.
'We picked up three people. They bought their tickets. When the bus left the station, a policeman asked me to close the door of the bus, because we normally leave it open for other people to jump on.
'Then he told me to stop the bus in front of the Ryad Mogador hotel. Then the police got on the bus and they went to check the guys and they found four big knives.'
The driver added: 'Passengers on the bus were very afraid because the police surrounded the bus and the area around it.'

Danish Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen confirmed the victims' identities as Louisa Vesterager Jespersen (pictured), of Denmark, and Maren Ueland, from Norway


Police launched an intensive manhunt after Maren Ueland and Louisa Vesterager Jespersen were found dead. Local media earlier released these images of three suspects

The four suspects are all thought to be from the Marrakesh area. Police have not ruled out a terror link to the murders


Ms Vesterager Jespersen, left, and Ms Ueland, right were both named in Scandinavian media on Monday as the two women found murdered in Morocco
Meanwhile, preliminary investigations of a video shared on social media purporting to show the killing of one of the tourists had found that it was shot in a different place from where the bodies were found, a police source told Reuters.
'The video and preliminary investigation according to the Moroccan authorities indicate that the killings may be related to the terrorist organisation Islamic State,' the Danish intelligence service said in a statement.
'This is a case of an unusually bestial killing of two totally innocent young women,' it said.
This morning, Denmark's prime minister said the killings can be considered 'politically motivated and thus an act of terror'. Lars Loekke Rasmussen said that 'there are still dark forces that want to fight our values' and 'we must not give in.'
Witnesses said that three men from Marrakesh were seen camping close to the women, and local media had earlier reported that sexual assault may have been the motive for the crime.
They were filmed fleeing the scene between 2am and 3am on Monday, on a camera belonging to another camper.
On Wednesday, police arrested a man from the city whose identity card was found at the murder scene.
Police are not thought to be seeking any other suspects in connection with the crime.
Officers have announced their intention to take the suspects to the murder scene to ask them how they committed the murder, but have not yet scheduled a time for it.
A French couple roday have described the horrific moment they found the two women's bodies.

Louisa Vesterager Jespersen, 24, pictured, and Ms Ueland, 28, were studying 'outdoor activities and cultural guidance' at a college in Norway

The video shows Ms Vesterager Jespersen hiking through snowy mountains as she speaks about her ambitions for the future
'My partner and I are on vacation and were going on a small hike. We saw a tent that was open. And we saw the two girls. It was horrible. They were corrupted,' the French woman, who refused to be named, told VG.
'Both of them lay outside the tent. The tent was open,' she said, adding that they took a photo to show police where they found them.
'We will think about this for the rest of our lives. We never saw the men, because we first came to the area in the morning. We were lucky, said the French woman, who is flying home with her partner today.
Earlier, a man who also saw the bodies said one of the victims had been decapitated.
The local resident, who asked not to be named for his own safety, said: 'I saw the two bodies before the police arrived. One was outside the tent and the other inside. The one outside had been beheaded.'

Forensic markers can be seen on the ground as police in Morocco investigate the killing of the two young women at the site of their tent

Forensics officers investigate a tent where the two Scandinavian women were discovered with their throats cut on Monday in the foothills of Mount Toubkal; a source said one was discovered outside the tent and another was inside
An employee of the Marrakesh hotel where two women stayed before their murder told MailOnline that three Moroccan men were waiting for the two women before they set off for the mountains.
'They came back at five in the afternoon to collect their luggage. They went and changed into outdoors clothes for the mountains,' the employer said.
'While they were packing, three other guys were waiting for them outside the hotel. They were Moroccans.
'They were young and they seemed clean-cut. They didn't seem like they were criminals. They were young, not more than 27 or 28 years old, and they seemed like nice guys, not at all suspicious.
'I think they met with the girls in the square and started speaking in English, and that's how they met. They were outside the hotel and didn't come in.
'Once they had changed, the girls packed their backpacks and left with the guys.
'They left the hotel and we didn't hear about them again until the 17th, when we heard that they had been murdered.'
Locals near the murder scene said three men seen pitching a tent nearby were not known in the area.
A hotelier said: 'Three homeless men came from Marrakesh and pitched a tent right next to the girls' tent. The men were not from round here.'

In a video Ms Vesterager Jespersen says: 'I'm trying to follow my dream to go into the Arctic'


Ms Jespersen (left and right) posted pictures of her hiking, kayaking and skiing on her social media accounts

As well as a video showing her trekking through snow covered hills, Ms Jespersen is also seen kayaking in fast running waters and rowing across a lake

In the video Ms Vesterager Jespersen can be seen laughing as she takes a sip from a coconut drink in an exotic country

Heartbreaking: Maren Ueland's mother, Irene, paid tribute to her daughter by sharing a picture on Facebook of her daughter and a huge dog

A picture taken on Thursday shows the tourist village of Imlil in the High Atlas range, which is used as a pit stop for trekkers

Both women had both been studying 'outdoor activities and cultural guidance' at a Norwegian college in the village of Bo

Both women's bodies were found in an isolated mountainous area six miles (ten kilometres) from the tourist village of Imlil
Both women's bodies were found in an isolated mountainous area six miles (ten kilometres) from the tourist village of Imlil.
Authorities in Denmark and Norway have warned their citizens since the killings from hiking alone without local guides in Morocco.
Danish police said on Wednesday they had sent an officer to Morocco to assist in the investigation.
Ms Ueland's mother, Irene, told Norwegian broadcaster NRK: 'Her priority was safety. The girls had taken all precautionary measures before embarking on this trip.'
She said they had been studying together at the University of South-Eastern Norway and had gone backpacking for a month-long Christmas holiday on December 9.
Ms Jespersen's mother Helle Jesperse told BT the family was 'completely broken', after being told the news of her daughter's death just before Christmas.
On November 21, Ms Jespersen wrote of her trip on Facebook: 'Dear friends, im going to Morocco in december. Any of you guys whos around by then or any mountain friends who knows something about Mount Toubkal? [sic]'
She had also posted pictures from previous trips in which he is hiking in mountains as well as skiing and kayaking.
Imlil is as a starting point for trekking and climbing tours of Mount Toubkal, the highest summit in North Africa.

A police vehicle is seen on a inside the tourist village of Imlil in the High Atlas range on Thursday

A helicopter at the crime scene where the bodies of Ms Jespersen and Ms Ueland were discovered in Imlil in the High Atlas range in Morocco

A police truck on the outskirts of Imlil on Thursday as investigators continue to gather evidence into the killings
Hossein, a local guide in the area, said: 'It's very bad for the region. There will undoubtedly be cancellations.'
The killings have sparked fears of a hit to Morocco's crucial tourist sector - which accounts for 10 per cent of national income - as the kingdom's relative security has always been a major selling point.
'What most of us had feared - that is to say a terrorist angle to the double crime in the region of Imlil, has been confirmed,' said leading news website Medias 24.
'Shock, sadness and revulsion are perceptible in Morocco,' it added.
Traumatised by the murders, residents of Imlil are deeply fearful for their livelihoods, and have helped investigators in identifying suspects, a tourism sector source told AFP.
Morocco is generally considered safe for tourists but has battled with Islamic extremism for years, and more than a thousand Moroccans are believed to have joined ISIS.
An anti-terrorism rally is planned for Morocco's capital on Saturday.
- 24-årige Louisa fundet dræbt i Marokko: Nu står moren frem | BT Krimi - www.bt.dk
- Norsk kvinne brutalt drept i Marokko: – En tragedie for hele landsbyen - VG
- Source: Police Arrest 3 Suspects for Killing Scandinavian Tourists Near Mount Toubkal
- Turistguiden Mohammed Jalal: – De tre mennene satte opp sitt telt 500–600 meter bak kvinnenes telt - Stavanger Aftenblad
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