THE MOTHER of a teenager killed in Syria fighting alongside Al Qaeda has slammed the Home Office for letting him out of the country on his brother’s passport.

Ibrahim Kamara, 19, left for the Middle East through Luton Airport last January posing as his 15-year-old brother Mohammed.

His mother Khadijah Kamara, 36, from Brighton, refused to renew the jihadi’s passport when he started talking about travelling to the war-torn country but he sneaked out of the UK behind her back.

Eight months later he was killed when a US air strike hit him and other members of Jabhat al-Nusra on the Syria-Iraq border.

Ms Kamara said: “I have been asked over and over again about Ibrahim, but who is asking the Border Agency or the Home Office?

“Ibrahim travelled and there was no proper security checks. I don’t understand what’s going on.

“All I get asked is what mosque did he go to.

“He had Mohammed’s passport because I refused to renew his because he was talking about going to help, but he still managed to go and nobody said anything.

“Nobody has given me an answer because we are just common people. If we were rich it would be different.

“It’s a careless blunder and they just want to talk about jihadi.

“They would have been able to stop this if they address those that are radicalising children, but all they want to know is what mosque he went to and it’s really unfair.”

It prompted the mother-of-four to call on her local MP Caroline Lucas to write to the Home Office and demand an explanation.

The Green MP for Brighton Pavilion was written to by the Minister for Security and Immigration James Brokenshire, who said: “Once an individual has been identified as having been radicalised, he or she can be placed on Home Office and police watchlists.

“Their travel can be identified in advance from passenger data provided by airlines.

“Unfortunately in this particular case, the passenger did not travel under his own name.”

The mother-of-four is convinced her son was brainwashed into travelling to Syria, but said she has no idea who had done it or where.

“If I knew, I would be the first one to tell, she said.

“I know there’s something behind my son going there but I don’t know who.

“I am so angry at these so-called Muslims.

“I don’t know what he was doing.

“I blame the ones who radicalised or brainwashed him, making him do these things and the people letting him travel.

“For me, I think it’s unfair.”