.Mohammed Emwazi targeted by a missile in Islamic State's capital in Syria
- .Former London student hit at 11.40pm last night near symbolic clock tower
- .Pentagon officials are '99 per cent' sure the British militant has been killed
- .Daughter of Briton David Haines says she felt 'an instant sense of relief'
- .David Cameron says UK has worked 'hand in glove' with US to take him out
- .His body is said to be 'lying in hospital in Raqqa' but ISIS claim he is alive
- .Emwazi, 27, hunted after beheading Western hostages in sickening videos
The world's most wanted man, Jihadi John, is believed to have been killed in a U.S. drone strike at the very heart of the Islamic State's Syrian capital where it stages horrific public executions.
Pentagon officials are '99 per cent' sure they have wiped out British ISIS executioner Mohammed Emwazi in the centre of the terror group's stronghold of Raqqa late last night.
The 27-year-old from London, who appeared in sickening beheading videos of Western hostages including two British aid workers, was 'evaporated' by a missile as he climbed into a car.
He is believed to have been hit near a symbolic clock tower where the group carries out barbaric killings, including crucifixions, after capturing the city two years ago, activists said.
Bethany Haines, 18, the daughter of one of his British victims, David Haines, today told how she felt 'an instant sense of relief' after hearing reports of his death, having previously said she would only have closure 'once there's a bullet between his eyes'.
But Stuart Henning, the nephew of British aid worker Alan Henning, who was also butchered by Emwazi, said he had mixed feelings because he had 'wanted the coward behind the mask to suffer'.
The British ISIS militant, whose real name is Mohammed Emwazi, carried out a number of beheadings of Western hostages in Syria. He is believed to have been killed in a U.S drone strike
This annotated image posted online by anti-ISIS activists Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently claims to show where Emwazi is believed to have been killed (circled), just yards from the group's headquarters in Raqqa
Mohammed Emwazi was blitzed by a missile fired from a drone which is thought to have been controlled by U.S. air force pilots sitting in a control centre thousands of miles away. A senior U.S. official said the ISIS executioner was pinpointed in the centre of the terror group's capital Raqqa after 'persistent surveillance'
A senior US defence official had earlier told Fox News: 'We are 99 per cent sure we got him. We were on him for some time.'
The Kuwaiti-born militant, who moved to the UK when he was six years old, was blown up in a 'flawless' and 'clean hit', another defence source told ABC News.
However, ISIS are claiming he survived the attack, with eyewitnesses telling Sky News he was taken badly injured to hospital which has been placed in lockdown by the Sunni fanatics.
Emwazi has been the subject of an international manhunt for more than a year after he first appeared in a chilling execution video in August last year.
He was top of the UK Government's 'kill list' of up to a dozen radicals who ministers want dead and David Cameron today said Britain had been working 'hand in glove' with the U.S. to track him down.
The British Prime Minister welcomed reports of the killing which he called an 'act of self defence'.
He stopped short of confirming that Emwazi - who he branded a 'barbaric murderer' - was dead but said the targeted attack was 'the right thing to do'.
There is a high possibility British spies were operating on the ground in Raqqa to help identify Emwazi before the strike and may now be trying to collect DNA evidence to prove his death.
Symbolic: Anti-ISIS activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently said Emwazi was thought to have been hit near a clock tower (above) in the city centre where ISIS has carried a number of public executions
A video released by the terror group shows a man being crucified near the clock tower in the centre of Raqqa
A senior U.S. official, quoted by CNN, said the drone strike came after 'persistent surveillance' and claimed the authorities were certain it was Emwazi when they fired the missile.
The drone is believed to have been tracking Emwazi for most of the day yesterday and he was 'ID'd and engaged' when he came out of a building and got into a vehicle in Raqqa.
Another senior military source told the BBC there is a 'high degree of certainty' he had been killed.
Anti-ISIS activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently (RIBSS), which operates in the Syrian city, reported that Emwazi was killed at around 11.40pm last night and said it counted a further 14 air strikes in just nine minutes between 11.51pm and midnight.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said a car carrying four foreign Islamic State leaders, including one British Jihadi, was hit near the municipality building in the city.
Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said: 'All the sources there are saying that the body of an important British Jihadi is lying in the hospital of Raqqa.
'All the sources are saying it is of Jihadi John but I cannot confirm it personally.'
RIBSS said Emwazi was thought to have been hit near a symbolic clock tower in the city centre where ISIS has carried a number of public executions.
The strike is also understood to have hit another member of 'The Beatles' – a nickname given to three or four British-sounding ISIS captors who guarded Western hostages, with Jihadi John being a reference to John Lennon.
Pentagon Press secretary Peter Cook said: 'US forces conducted an air strike in Raqqa, Syria, on November 12, 2015 targeting Mohamed Emwazi, also known as 'Jihadi John' (file photo)
Officials in the US are still trying to determine whether he has been killed, following the drone attacks in Raqqa, Islamic State's capital
A second member of the cell – nicknamed 'Jihadi George' after George Harrison – is believed to be London rapper Abdel-Majed Abdel Bary who fled to Syria in 2013.
The former rap star, whose father was a key lieutenant of Osama bin Laden, was among the first foreign fighters to take up arms in the war zone two years ago.
However, it was reported in July he had fled to Turkey after becoming disillusioned with jihadi life.
Confirming the drone strike, Pentagon Press secretary Peter Cook said: 'US forces conducted an airstrike in Raqqa, Syria, on November 12, 2015 targeting Mohamed Emwazi, also known as Jihadi John.
'We are assessing the results of tonight's operation and will provide additional information as and where appropriate.'
Emwazi was involved in the murders of British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, U.S. journalists Steven Sotloff and James Foley, American aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig (also known as Peter Kassig).
They were followed by Japanese journalist Kenji Goto and Japanese businessman Haruna Yukawa, who were killed in January.
Mr Haines, an aid worker from Scotland, was executed in September last year, having been held captive for 18 months.
His daughter, Bethany, told ITV News: 'After seeing the news that Jihadi John was killed I felt an instant sense of relief'
But she added: 'As much as I wanted him dead, I also wanted answers as to why he did it, why my dad, how did it make a difference.'
Previously she said she felt families of Emwazi's victims would only feel closure 'once there's a bullet between (his) eyes'.
A video released a month later showed 47-year-old Salford taxi driver Mr Henning appearing to be beheaded.
An aerial view of explosions at a fortified position in what Russia says was an ISIS ammunition depot in Syria. ISIS executioner Jihadi John is believed to have been killed in a similar strike by a U.S. drone
His daughter Lucy said she found out he had been killed when she saw an image posted on social media site Instagram.
Meanwhile, writing on Twitter, Mr Henning's nephew, Stuart, said: 'Mixed feelings today wanted the coward behind the mask to suffer the way Alan and his friends did but also glad (he's) been destroyed.'
Mr Henning's brother, Reg Henning, told ITV News that he hoped it was 'the end of it' but 'would have preferred him to face justice'.
He added: 'I think things will quieten down. If they had arrested him and gone to court, it would have dragged on for months and months.'
A British campaign group which sparked controversy after it described Jihadi John as a 'beautiful young man' has said the terrorist should have been tried as a war criminal and not killed.
In a statement today, Cage said the Briton's reported killing 'presents more questions than it does answers', adding: 'State-sponsored targeted assassinations undercut the judicial processes that provide the lessons by which spirals of violence can be stopped.'
Raffaello Pantucci, director of international security studies at the Royal United Services Institute, said if confirmed, Emwazi's death would make little strategic difference and could create a 'martyr culture' around him.
'It's more a symbolic strike, he said. 'Tactically it's not really going to change anything for the group.'
But Charlie Winter, a British academic from the Quilliam Foundation which focuses on ISIS activities, said it could be a 'big blow'.
'Symbolically it's really important. Jihadi John... was someone who was a source of hubris, a sort of an aspirational figure for fighters in Islamic State,' he said.
'He was a key figure of defiance in the face of the international coalition, so if in fact he has been killed, this is going to be a big blow.'
However, one of Emwazi's former neighbours in London today said he should have been captured, interrogated and made to face trial rather than being killed.
James Beker, 47, who lives above the Emwazi family in West Kilburn, west London, said the ISIS killer would have had vital information that could have kept Britain safe from attack.
Emwazi hunted for over a year after he first appeared in a beheading video in August 2014
The father-of-three said: 'I feel sorry he has been killed in this way. They should have put him on trial and interrogated him for information.
'They might have got information that we need for the safety of our country and find out why did he do that.
'They said he was intelligent so how did he turn evil? He turned into not really a beast but a monster.'
Emwazi appeared in the videos dressed in black with only his eves visible, and spoke with a British accent as he went on anti-western rants to the camera while wielding a knife.
It was not until February this year that the jihadist was unmasked as Kuwaiti-born Emwazi, who lived in the UK since the age of six.
It emerged that Emwazi had been known to British intelligence services, but managed to travel to Syria in 2013.
In the videos, the tall masked figure was clad in black and speaking in a British accent.
He began one of the gruesome videos with a political rant and a kneeling hostage before him, then ended it holding a large knife in his hand with the headless victim lying before him in the sand.
Journalist Sotloff's mother, Shirley Sotloff was unaware of the air strikes, but said Emwazi's death would not bring closure.
She told NBC News: 'If they got him great. But it doesn't bring my son back.'
Diane Foley, the mother of James Foley, who previously said she had forgiven Emwazi, told ABC News: 'This huge effort to go after this deranged man filled with hate when they can't make half that effort to save the hostages while these young Americans were still alive.'
A Downing Street spokeswoman said: 'We are aware of the US statement about the air strike targeting Mohamed Emwazi. Like them, we are not commenting further at this stage.'
In September the MailOnline revealed that Emwazi had a crippling fear of being killed in a drone attack and shielded himself behind civilians in the hope it will stop him being targeted.
Two visitors to ISIS territory described how he and his depraved cohorts fled onto a football pitch packed with civilians in a desperate attempt to dodge a drone attack.
Emwazi emigrated with his family to London in 1994, aged six. He attended Qunitin Kynaston Academy and then went on to study computer programming at the University of Westminster, graduating in 2009.
He was reported missing in August 2013 and it was confirmed in December that year that he had travelled to Syria.
He had been known to MI5 and was detained a number of times in 2009, but never charged.
It was believed that he had been a member terrorist supporters and was in contact with one of the men involved in the London 7/7 bombings in 2005, two weeks after the attacks which killed 52 people.
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