
A cache of leaked “surveys” given to would-be jihadis joining ISIS show the 23 questions that make up the terror group’s rigorous “entrance interviews”.
The documents ask new recruits to detail a host of information in 23 fields, including their birth date, nationality, blood type and “previous jihadi experience”.
Tens of thousands of the forms, obtained by Sky News, reveal the names of 22,000 people from at least 51 countries, including the UK, who gave up personal information as they joined the militant group.
The forms showing the 23-question survey in Arabic were previously published online by Zaman Al Wasl, a pro-opposition Syrian news website.
Zaman Al Wasl’s report claimed the personal details of 1,736 fighters from 40 countries had been revealed, showing that a quarter were Saudis and the rest predominantly Tunisian, Moroccan and Egyptian.
The documents, written in Arabic and stamped with logos used by the so-called Islamic State, allegedly contain details of 16 British fighters.
In addition to their names, the forms show prospective ISIS recruits were asked to give their “fighter name” as well as their “mother’s maiden name”.
They were asked to list their “level of education”, “level of Sharia understanding” and whether they had “fought before”.
