His
grandfather told of how the child begged him to save him just days
before he was forced to appear in the first video last month.
In
what was seen as a 'promotion' of this latest murderous release, Dare
was made to declare: 'We are going to kill the kuffar [non-believers]
over there' - before pointing to the men killed in today's video.
Today's
video, which is believed to be shot in ISIS's de facto capital of
Raqqa, was entitled: 'They are the enemy so be aware of them.'
One
by one, each man confessed to either spying on, or conspiring against,
ISIS. They were later seen handcuffed to the inside of a car - with a
look of utter fear in their eyes.
Before
they were killed, the senior ISIS commander standing next to the boy
threatened British Prime Minister David Cameron for arming the terror
group's enemies in Syria.
He said: 'You will never fight us except behind fortified fortresses or behind walls.
'So no David Cameron, you’ve given the whole world more certainty in this [inaudible]. You’ve only done two things.
'Firstly,
when you sent your spies to Syria and when you authorised for your men,
thousands of miles away, to push a button to kill our brothers who lived
in the West.
'So today, we’re going to kill your spies the same way they helped you kill our brothers.'
As
he placed a hand on the young boy's head, he added: 'So prepare your
army and gather your nations as we too are preparing our army.
Young
Dare was brainwashed by ISIS fanatics after his mother, 24, who had
links to Lee Rigby's killer, brought him to the warzone.
His
grandfather, Henry Dare, 59, said Isa made a desperate plea for help
during a heartbreaking phone call just days before he featured in the
barbaric stunt, saying: 'Please save me.'
It
later emerged that Isa's father had made a desperate attempt to rescue
his son after his estranged wife fled to Syria and married an ISIS
militant.
Asked
if he thought his grandson had any idea what he was saying in the
video, Mr Dare – of Deptford, south east London – said: 'No – he's a
kid.
'He's a
minor, he's under five. He's acting under the influence of ISIS
guerrillas. He's too young. He's propaganda. They are just using a small
boy. They are using him as a shield.'
Mr
Dare said he had reported Grace to the police on three occasions before
she left for Syria and told them 'she's behaving in a very funny way'.
Grace
Dare is believed to have been radicalised online, then began attending
the Lewisham Islamic Centre, where Fusilier Rigby's murderers Michael
Adebolajo and Michael Adebowale are reported to have worshipped.
The
mosque has denied they were part of the congregation. Her mother
Victoria said she changed her first name to Khadija after she began
attending the mosque.
'I
still call her our Grace,' said the mother. 'I want her back in my
life. She is the only child that I have and the devil took her away.'
Dare,
born in London in 1991 of Nigerian descent, went to Syria in around
2012 and married a Swede known as Abu Bakr. He is now dead.
She
used social media to gloat about the beheading of American journalist
James Foley and said she wanted to be the first British woman to kill an
ISIS hostage.
Her mother,
also from Lewisham, said of her daughter in a BBC TV documentary last
April: 'She loved church. She had a Bible, she read the Bible.
'She would sit and pray and pray and pray.'
Downing Street said the release of the video on Sunday showed the terrorist group was 'under pressure'.
The
footage shows five men in orange jumpsuits 'confessing' to taking money
in return for filming and photographing sites within Raqqa, the capital
of ISIS's self-declared caliphate.
A
member of a Raqqa-based group which opposes ISIS told the Radio 4 Today
programme that the victims included shopkeepers and businessmen from
the town.
The
Prime Minister's official spokesman said of the video that 'it reflects
the barbarity of this organisation but it is also a propaganda tool.
This is a terrorist group we are seeing put under pressure.
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