Sydney: The grandfather of a boy pictured holding a severed head in Syria said the shocking image brought him to tears, with the growing problem of radical Islamist militants fighting overseas a focus of US-Australia talks on Tuesday.
The image of the Sydney-raised boy posing with the rotting head of a soldier, posted on the Twitter account of his father Khaled Sharrouf, an Australian who fled to Syria last year and is now an Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) fighter, sparked outrage.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott and US Secretary of Defence Chuck Hagel said it showed how barbaric Isil militants had become, while Australian Muslim leaders expressed widespread revulsion.
The seven-year-old boys grandfather Peter Nettleton, who is estranged from his daughter Tara, Sharroufs wife, begged the government to help bring the boy and his siblings home.
Im scared for the children. What life are they going to have now, the Sydney truck driver told Sydneys The Daily Telegraph.
Cant the government do something to pull these kids away from that man?
That [picture] brought me to tears because I dont know how to handle it.
Another photo published by newspapers in Australia showed Sharrouf dressed in camouflage fatigues posing with three young boys believed to be his sons.
All were holding guns in front of the flag of Isil militants who have swept across Iraq and Syria, seizing swathes of territory.
Fairfax media said it had seen another image of one of the boys wearing an explosives belt.
New challenges
Australia has an arrest warrant out for Sharrouf, who fled the country last year using his brothers passport after serving almost four years in prison when he pleaded guilty over a 2005 conspiracy to attack Sydney.
Nettleton, whose daughter cut off ties with him when she married and converted to Islam, said he thought his five grandchildren three boys and two girls were staying with Sharroufs sister in Malaysia while he fought in Syria.
A friend of Sharroufs, Mohammad Al Omar, who is also a wanted man and is fighting in Syria, reacted to the photo of the boy with a tweet to keep them heads rolling, the Telegraph reported.
What a flaming ripper, ayyy beauty mate, love it, keep them heads rolling, it reportedly said, while Sharroufs brother told Fairfax that Australia should forget about the photo.
Hes gone, forget about it. Hes forgotten about youse, Sydney-based Mustafa Sharrouf said.
Officials have said up to 150 Australians are fighting alongside militants overseas, mostly in Iraq and Syria. Many other countries also have nationals in the war zones.
Canberra has previously confirmed that two Australians, including an 18-year-old, have already been behind deadly suicide bombings in the Iraq and Syria conflicts.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said militants whose barbaric ideology threatened Australias way of life would be discussed at security talks with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Sydney on Tuesday.
Countries including in Europe, in Southeast Asia, in north Asia are concerned about citizens… fighting overseas in Iraq, in Syria and other conflicts, returning home as hardened, home-grown terrorists, extremists, capable of carrying out terrorist activity in our own countries, she said.
In brief opening remarks at the annual Australia-US Ministerial Consultations (AUSMIN), Kerry agreed that we do face new challenges, pointing to foreign fighters who learn jihadism and come back with bad intentions as an issue of concern.
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