Four out of ten British Muslims partly blame MI5 and the police for radicalising British teenagers who then flee the country to join ISIS.

A survey of 1,001 British Muslims found that one in four of this cohort had some sympathy with those who decide to join terror organisations such as ISIS.

The figures show that among young and female Muslims, one third have sympathy for the Jihadi runaways despite the deplorable images of ISIS atrocities posted on the internet. Eight per cent agreed they had 'a lot of sympathy' for the likes of Jihadi John.

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Four out of ten British Muslims partly blame the security services for radicalising young Jihadis

Eight per cent of British Muslims said they had 'a lot of sympathy' for the likes of Jihadi John, pictured

Six out of ten strongly condemned those, such as Jihadi John, who have joined ISIS.

The survey conducted by Survation on behalf of Sky News found that one-third of all Muslims felt they are viewed with suspicion by non-Muslims.

It follows a similar poll earlier this year that found more than a quarter of Muslims sympathised with the Charlie Hebdo attackers, who brutally murdered journalists at the satirical magazine's offices in Paris.

Yesterday's Survation study of 1,001 non-Muslims, 44 per cent agreed they were more suspicious of Muslims than they had been previously.

The pollsters asked Muslims and non-Muslims about whether they felt Islam was 'compatible' with British values and the British way of life.

According to the survey, three quarters of Muslims agreed their religion was compatible with the values of British society, with 14 per cent disagreeing.

For non-Muslims, less than one quarter viewed Islam as compatible with British values with around half saying the religion was incompatible.

One in five followers of Islam believe that British Muslims do not do enough to integrate into society, while 64 per cent believe they do, the pollsters found. Another six per cent felt it was not important for Muslims to fit into British society.

WHO SHOULD STOP MUSLIMS JOINING TERRORIST GROUPS? Their families: 44% Government: 15.1% Religious authorities: 8.8% Police: 3% Schools: 2.2% No-one: 4.6% Other: 22.1% 1,001 Muslims polled by Survation for Sky News Advertisement

The researchers found that one in seven non-Muslims had sympathy for those who have joined ISIS.

The researchers found that almost 40 per cent of Muslims agreed that the security services were partly responsible for radicalising young Jihadis, compared with 16 per cent of non-Muslims.

Meanwhile more than half of the Muslims surveyed said it was their responsibility to condemn terrorist attacks by Muslims in the name of Islam, while a third said it was not.

When it comes to stopping young Muslims joining terrorist groups, 44 per cent felt it was the responsibility of their families to set them straight.

More than 15 per cent said it was the government's responsibility, followed by religious authorities (nine per cent), the police (three per cent) and schools (two per cent).

The father of one of the three east London schoolgirls who fled to Syria to become 'jihadi brides' blamed the police for failing to keep track of them.

Abase Hussen (circled) blamed the police and schools for allowing his daughter to travel to Syria to join ISIS, only for footage to emerge of him at an extremist rally in central London

More than a quarter of Muslims polled in a previous survey said they had sympathy for the Charlie Hebdo attackers

Abase Hussen gave evidence to Parliament refusing to accept any responsibility for the three schoolgirls’ actions, instead seeking to blame the police, teachers, Turkish officials and others.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe issued a grovelling apology to the family, only for footage to emerge showing Mr Hussen at an extremist rally in central London.

He could be seen standing just feet from one of Lee Rigby's killers while yelling: 'Burn, burn USA.'

The survey comes two months after a separate poll found that more than quarter of Muslims said they had sympathy for Charlie Hebdo attackers Said and Cherif Kouachi, who killed 12 on their rampage around Paris.

That poll, commissioned by the BBC, also found that 32 per cent of Muslims were 'not surprised' that the massacre took place.

And more than 10 per cent of the 1,000 British Muslims interviewed agreed that the magazine 'deserved' to be attacked.

The Muslim Council of Britain told the Daily Telegraph: 'For many, current counter-terrorism measures, particularly related to the Prevent strategy, actually lead to greater alienation as Muslims are seen through the lens of security, rather than tackling the scourge of terrorism itself.'