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ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi: From average schoolboy to world's most wanted man

Feared Islamic State chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, carrying a US $10 million bounty on his head, had to repeat a year at school, was turned down for the Iraqi army and failed to win a university place to study law. Baghdadi, who declared himself as Caliph and renamed the ISIS as Islamic State, was less than outstanding in his youth, according to information gathered by researchers in Germany.

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Feared Islamic State chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, carrying a US $10 million bounty on his head, had to repeat a year at school, was turned down for the Iraqi army and failed to win a university place to study law. Baghdadi, who declared himself as Caliph and renamed the ISIS as Islamic State, was less than outstanding in his youth, according to information gathered by researchers in Germany.

44-year-old radical Islamist leader heads the dreaded ISIS that has seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria and executed hundreds of civilians and foreigners.

"The man who has declared himself caliph of a new Islamic State had to repeat a year at school because he was so bad at English," London-based Independent newspaper said, citing new details emerged about the background of the ISIS leader.

The Suddeutsche Zeitung newspaper and Germany's ARD TV channel showed new details yesterday after interviewing residents of Samarra, Baghdadi's home town in Iraq, where he went to school and played football in its narrow streets.

"He loved power and being influential," said one former neighbour of Baghdadi, who was the third of four sons born to a devout Sunni Muslim family. "He was turned down for the Iraqi army, despite being a member of the Sunni minority favoured by the regime of the country's dictator, Saddam Hussein, because he was too short-sighted," the reports said.

Baghdadi was rated as "an average pupil at the town's grammar school and his school matriculation marks were too low for Baghdad university to accept him on its law course," the media reports said. "Instead, he opted for Islamic theology, a subject whose study, perhaps combined with his earlier experiences, contributed to radicalising his views," they said.

After eight years studying Islamic theology, he emerged with a PhD degree in 1999.

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