An Indian takeaway driver from east London was last night named as one of the latest Britons to die in Syria.

Kamran ul-Haq died last month when he was crushed by rubble in an American air strike, it was reported.

In an interview with The Guardian, the 29-year-old’s elder brother said ul-Haq had become ‘trapped’ in Syria after losing his passport and fearing arrest if he returned.

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Abu Dujana al-Britani, thought to be one of the Portsmouth six, is thought to have been killed in Kobane

The paper also reported text messages sent by ul-Haq before he was killed.

One read: ‘I might be going on a mad mission very soon. There’s a place that has been heavily attacked and bombarded.’

The Whitechapel takeaway driver had flown out to Syria in December and become an amublance driver to help carry casualties to field hospitals.

Another of his text messages read: ‘(They) need me here and my ambulance to take people out. Very risky mission but I love the feeling.’

His older brother told The Guardian he had tried to persuade him to return home to help care for his elderly mother, his wife and 17-month-old daughter.

But ul-Haq had replied: ‘I have already done some mad missions. If we don’t do it then who will?’

Four weeks later – on September 22 – he was killed by one of the cruise missiles fired at eight terrorist bases in the region in a coordinated strike by the US, it was claimed.

It is thought the men were killed by a cruiser missile on the border town of Kobane where conflict has raged for weeks

Kurdish fighters and ISIS jihadis have been battling over the border town for weeks as American and Arab forces launch joint air strikes

King’s College London’s International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation told The Guardian at least 23 British jihadists are now known to have been killed in the fighting but believe the figure is much higher.

His brother last night said ul-Haq had got involved in Syria after watching YouTube videos of women and children being ‘slaughtered’.

He was among those to fly out to the Middle Eastern country in an aid convoy from London in March 2012.

It also was reported last night that a British fighter in Syria known as Abu Dujana al-Britani had been killed in an air strike in Kobane.

Charlie Winter - Middle East researcher at counter extremism think tank the Quilliam Foundation - said on Twitter last night: ‘Abu Dujana al-Britani, latest #IS fighter from #UK to be killed in #Syria.

He died in #Kobane’. He cited foreign fighter blogger Pieter Van Ostaeyen as his source.