religious, still doesn't know how to pray and would have joined any group that was willing to take him at the time

Says he was never

he was angry at his fiancee's family

Now he claims he only joined ISIS as

accused of being member of the terrorist group

A German jihadi has claimed he only joined ISIS due to the 'humiliation' of having his wedding called off - adding that he would have joined the Hell's Angels instead if he'd have been able to.

Ebrahim B, a 26-year-old German national of Tunisian origin, travelled to Syria to join ISIS last year but was captured and interrogated by the terrorists who feared he was a spy.

The ex-militant eventually managed to escape his blood-soaked cell at an ISIS 'execution centre' in Syria and returned to Germany, where he was promptly arrested.

Since his arrest, Ebrahim B has claimed he was 'never religious' and still doesn't even know the proper way to pray, adding that he only joined ISIS because he was desperate to leave Germany.

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'Humiliated': Ebrahim B (pictured with his back to the camera today) travelled to Syria to join ISIS last year but was captured and interrogated by terrorists who feared he was a spy

Behind bars: In a highly unusual television interview from behind bars ahead of his trial (pictured), Ebrahim B denounced ISIS and said the terror group has 'nothing to do with Islam'

Having escaped ISIS, Ebrahim B returned to Germany where he and another defendant, Ayoub B were arrested on charges of being members of a terrorist organisation.

Ebrahim B is also accused of plotting a suicide bombing in Baghdad.

But in a series of extraordinary claims, the former jihadi has now stated that he was easily radicalised by the terror group because he looking for a way to escape his personal crises.

On his first day in court yesterday, Ebrahim B said he'd been left intensely embarrassed when his fiancée's family called off his wedding.

'I felt humiliated. I was also angry at my parents. All I wanted was to leave,' The Telegraph quoted him as telling the court.

'If I'd been recruited by a motorcycle gang at that time and expected to fly to America to join the Hell's Angels, I'd have gone,' he reportedly added.

'Why didn't you do that then?' Judge Henning Meier asked him.

'Because they wouldn't have taken me,' Ebrahim HB replied.

Promises: He said he was 'conned' into joining the terror group and was told he would be given four brides

Courtroom: Ebrahim B (second from left) pictured with Ayoub B, 27, (seated) in court in Celle, Germany

Following his arrest, Ebrahim HB claimed he was 'conned' into joining the terror group with the promise of four wives and an expensive car has described the moment he heard a prisoner being decapitated.

Speaking from a prison cell in Germany, ahead of his court appearance, the militant described the harsh reality of the terror group he joined voluntarily.

In August last year, Ebrahim B, from Wolfsburg, found himself locked in a blood-soaked cell in an ISIS 'execution centre' in Syria.

He heard a fellow prisoner being decapitated before the body was dumped next to him, the head placed on top of the torso - the terror group's gruesome trademark.

'It was like the sound of a cat being run over,' he said, according to The Independent.

The dead prisoner, like Ebrahim B, had been accused of being a spy.

However, a recruitment officer vouched for Ebrahim B, and says he was able to escape while taking an injured ISIS fighter to Turkey for medical treatment.

Ebrahim B appeared in court with another ISIS-returnee known as Ayoub B (pictured with his face covered)

Ebrahim B (not pictured) and Ayoub B (pictured with a folder in front of his face) appeared in court

The 26-year-old handed himself in to the authorities when he returned to Germany.

He is appearing in court alongside a fellow ISIS-returnee called Ayoub B, 27.

In his only interview from jail, Ebrahim B told Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung that ISIS had nothing to do with Islam and he was 'conned' into joining.

He claims he was persuaded to sign up by Yassin Ousaiffi, who at the time was a recruitment officer at Wolfsburg's Ditib Mosque.

A growing number of foreign fighters who left their homes to join ISIS are now trying to escape from its tyrannical rule.

A growing number of foreigners are trying to escape from ISIS after being lured from their homes by the group

They are lured to Iraq and Syria under the false impression they will be paid good money, married off and given a position of responsibility

However, the dark reality of living under the terror group's reign soon hits home, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

As many as 22,000 foreigners are fighting in Syria and Iraq where ISIS controls the vast majority of its territory, a United Nations report claimed.