Jordan Executes 2 Terrorists after ’ISIL’ Burning Murder of Pilot

Local Editor
Jordan executed two death-row extremists including an Iraqi woman militant on Wednesday after vowing to avenge the burning alive of one of its fighter pilots by the "ISIL" group.
Would-be Iraqi female suicide bomber Sajida al-Rishawi and Iraqi Al-Qaeda member Ziad al-Karboli were hanged at 4:00 am, government spokesman Mohammad al-Momani said.
A security source said the executions were carried out at Swaqa prison south of the capital in the presence of an Islamic legal official.
Jordan had promised to begin executing extremists on death row at daybreak in response to the murder of Maaz al-Kassasbeh, who was captured by "ISIL" when his plane went down in Syria in December.
Rishawi, 44, was sentenced to death for her participation in deadly attacks in Amman in 2005. "ISIL" had offered to spare Kassasbeh's life and free a Japanese hostage -- who was later beheaded -- if she were released.
Karboli was sentenced to death in 2007 on terrorism charges, including the killing of a Jordanian in Iraq.
Jordan had on Tuesday vowed to avenge the killing of Kassasbeh, hours after a harrowing video emerged online purporting to show the caged 26-year-old F-16 fighter pilot engulfed in flames.
The video - the most brutal yet in a series of gruesome recorded killings of hostages by "ISIL"- prompted global revulsion and vows of continued international efforts to combat the Sunni Muslim extremist group.
The killing sparked outrage in Jordan and demonstrations in Amman and the city of Karak, the home of Kassasbeh's influential tribe.
Jordan's King Abdullah II, who was visiting Washington as the video came to light, described Kassasbeh as a hero and vowed to take the battle to "ISIL".
The army and government promised to avenge the pilot's murder, with Momani saying: "Jordan's response will be earth-shattering."
US President Barack Obama, who hosted Abdullah in a hastily organized Oval Office meeting, led international condemnation of the murder, decrying the "cowardice and depravity" of "ISIL".
"The president and King Abdullah reaffirmed that the vile murder of this brave Jordanian will only serve to steel the international community's resolve to destroy ISIL," a National Security Council spokesman said after the pair met, using an alternative name for "ISIL".
The Obama administration had earlier reaffirmed its intention to give Jordan $3 billion in security aid over the next three years.
Kassasbeh was captured in December when his jet crashed over northern Syria on a mission that was part of the coalition air campaign against the "ISIL".
Jordanian state television suggested he was killed on January 3, before "ISIL" offered to spare his life and free Japanese journalist Kenji Goto in return for Rishawi's release.
The highly choreographed 22-minute video released Tuesday shows Kassasbeh at a table recounting coalition operations against "ISIL", with flags from the various Western and Arab countries in the alliance projected in the background.
It then shows Kassasbeh dressed in an orange jumpsuit and surrounded by armed and masked " fighters in camouflage.
It cuts to him standing inside a cage and apparently soaked in petrol before a masked terrorists lights a trail of flame that runs to the cage and burns him alive.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team
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