Mohammed Zammar: German jihadist 'detained by Syrian Kurds' Published duration 19 April 2018 Related Topics Syrian civil war

image copyright Twitter/@bjoernstritzel image caption In 2014, Mohammed Zammar was filmed at a meeting between IS militants and Syrian tribesmen

A Syrian-born German jihadist linked to the 11 September 2001 attackers has reportedly been detained by Kurdish fighters in northern Syria.

A commander of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces alliance told the AFP news agency that Mohammed Haydar Zammar was in custody and being questioned.

The commander did not say whether Zammar was suspected of fighting for the Islamic State group (IS).

The US-led global coalition against IS said it could not confirm the report.

The SDF has detained hundreds of foreign IS militants as it drives the jihadist group from tens of thousands of kilometres of northern and eastern Syria.

The arrested militants are reportedly being held at camps near Raqqa, a city that served as the de facto capital of the IS "caliphate" until it fell to the SDF in October.

Zammar moved from Syria to Germany in 1971. By the late 1990s, he was a prominent Islamist in the German city of Hamburg.

The German authorities investigated Zammar after 9/11 on suspicion that he had "supported a terrorist organisation", but he was released and left the country.

In 2007, a Syrian court sentenced Zammar to 12 years in prison for four offences, including membership of the outlawed Syrian Muslim Brotherhood organisation.