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Japanese Muslim quizzed over plan to join Islamic State in Syria

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Police are questioning a 26-year-old Japanese Muslim on suspicion of trying to join Islamic State (IS) jihadists in Syria, media reports and the top government spokesman said on Tuesday.

The man, a student at Hokkaido University, had reportedly planned to fly to the Middle East this week to fight with the Islamic extremist group which has cut a swathe through Syria and Iraq.

The student told police he "was planning to travel to Syria so as to join Islamic State to work as a fighter", the Mainichi Shimbun and other media reported. He hatched the plan after spotting a job advertisement posted at a second-hand bookshop in Tokyo.

The poster, which was shown on NHK (Japan's national broadcasting organisation), directed people interested in working in Syria to the shop clerk. It said a monthly wage of 15,000 RMB (around $2,400) was payable for people "not afraid of violence" to work alongside Uighurs in Syria.

Uighurs are mainly-Muslim inhabitants of China's northwest Xinjiang province. Beijing is facing mounting violence there, which it has blamed on separatists it says have been radicalised through contact with overseas-based terror groups. 

Most scholars remain skeptical of China's claims, however, with some arguing that Beijing exaggerates the threat to justify its hardline measures in Xinjiang. There have been no confirmed reports of Uighurs fighting alongside Islamic State in Syria or Iraq. No Chinese language ability was necessary, said the advertisement. There was no explanation of what the work entailed, or why the wage would be paid in the Chinese currency.

Hundreds of mostly young men have travelled from Europe and North America to join forces with the brutal group of jihadists, which has declared an Islamic "caliphate". However, this is believed to be the first attempt by a Japanese.

Japan has a tiny Muslim population made up largely of relatively recent immigrants and little history of home-grown religious extremism. Detectives are also investigating the advertiser, the Yomiuri Shimbun said, without giving details of his or her identity.

An employee at the bookstore was quoted as saying, "I introduced several people to a former university professor of Islamic law." The academic denied advising anyone to join the jihadis, the Asahi Shimbun said, without identifying him or her.

The relationship between the bookstore and the advertiser was not immediately clear. A police spokesman declined to comment on the case.

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