ISIS commander 'Omar the Chechen' allegedly killed

13 Nov, 2014 15:46 / Updated 9 years ago

The Islamic State military commander "Omar the Chechen,” who threatened Russia with a jihadist onslaught, has been eliminated, said Chechnya's leader Ramzan Kadyrov. He posted a photo on Instagram which he says is proof.

“The enemy of Islam, Tarkhan Batirashvili, who called himself Omar Ash-Shishani ("Shishani" is Arabic for "Chechen"), has been killed," Kadyrov posted. "That will happen to everyone who will threaten Russia and the people of Chechnya. This will happen to everyone who sheds Muslims' blood."


RT has so far been unable to verify this information.

In early October, Omar the Chechen told his father, Temur Batirashvili, that the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) has plans to invade Russia, according to Bloomberg.

This phone call came a month after the Islamic State issued a video threatening to include Chechnya and the Caucasus in its self-proclaimed caliphate.

READ MORE: ISIS threatens to 'liberate' Chechnya and Caucasus

The viral video message recorded in Arabic drew an angry response from the Chechen leader.

“Those bastards have nothing to do with Islam. They are enemies of Muslims everywhere,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

“Whoever dares to threaten Russia and say out loud the name of our President Vladimir Putin will be destroyed right where he is…These people will end their days under the hot sun of Syria and Iraq, and moments after death they will be greeted by the flames of eternal hell.”

Ramzan Kadyrov vowed to prevent Omar the Chechen from reaching Russia, stating that he would be killed in the place where he made his threats.

Tarkhan Batirashvili, a Georgian national, was radicalized in prison, where he was serving a term for illegal weapons possession. He was pardoned in 2012. Reportedly, due to health issues, Omar the Chechen then traveled to Syria and joined the Islamic State. He was rapidly promoted and became a top IS military commander. He previously oversaw a prison facility near IS-controlled Raqqah, where terrorists have reportedly detained dozens of captured foreign hostages, including many journalists.