ISIS migrant pictured frolicking at music festival months before train axe attack
Brainwashed Mohammed Riyadh was shot and killed by German police after leaving five people severely injured in savage terror attack

A SHOCKING picture shows a brainwashed ISIS fanatic sporting a pink wig while joking around at a music festival– months before going on a “slaughterhouse” axe rampage in Germany.
Posted on Facebook in February, the image shows warped terrorist Mohammed Riyadh wearing a comedy toupee while attending a Fasching Carnival – an event popular in German speaking countries.
The 17-year-old injured five people on Monday when he carried out a savage axe and knife attack on a train Bavaria - before being gunned down by police.
Two of those injured in the attack, which death cult ISIS has claimed responsibility for, remain in a serious condition in hospital.
The terror group has released a video showing Riyad wielding a knife on camera spouting threats against western 'non-believers'.
Speaking Pashto - one of Afghanistan's official languages - the man threatens terror attacks "in answer to the calls to target the countries of the coalition fighting the Islamic State".
He rages: "I am a soldier of the caliphate. I will lead a martyr attack.
“Soldiers of the caliphate will slaughter you in your homeland. Know this, that Islamic State is powerful and has your parliaments in its sights.
“I’ll fight you so long as I live. I’ll slaughter you with this knife and cut your throats with axes.”
The knife and axe attack left five people severely injured on a commuter train in the German city of Wurzburg on Monday.
The terror group's propaganda arm Amaq this morning claimed the Afghan assailant was one of its fighters.
Police had earlier found a hand-painted ISIS flag in his bedroom and note - also written in Pashto - that indicated he had become self-radicalised.
A statement from the terror group read: "The perpetrator of the stabbing attack in Germany was one of the fighters of the Islamic State and carried out the operation in answer to the calls to target the countries of the coalition fighting the Islamic State."
Carriages of a commuter train were left looking "like a slaughterhouse" after the teenage refugee attacked train passengers.
One of those seriously injured was a local women, while two were tourists from Hong Kong.
Eighteen were injured in total.
Survivors are being treated by trauma counsellors after witnessing the attack and the axeman being shot dead by police marksmen as he tried to flee the scene.
One witness, who went to the train from her nearby home to help out after it stopped on a stretch of line in Bavaria, said: "I have never seen so much blood in my life.
"I will not sleep tonight."
Horrified survivors leaped from the train screaming for bandages to help the three severely wounded, who are all members of the same family from Hong Kong, inside.
The 17-year-old attacker shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is great) during the attack, according to a Bavarian interior ministry spokesman, who added: “It is quite probable that this was an Islamist attack.”
Minister Joachim Herrmann said the boy had come to Germany from Afghanistan as an unaccompanied refugee.
A dad, 62, his wife, 58, their 27-year-old daughter and her boyfriend, 31, were all targeted in the attack. The couple's 17-year-old son was uninjured.
Police said the dad and son were badly hacked with the knife as they tried to fight the attacker off.
Local media reported that up to 20 people had been attacked on the train in the Heidingsfeld district of Wurzburg in Bavaria, southern Germany, at about 9.15pm local time.
Grim images printed in German newspapers showed lino-covered floors of the regional train from Treuchtlingen to Wurzberg awash with blood.
The carriage was left awash with blood and filled with abandoned belongings.
Police said three commuters were critically injured, another suffered minor wounds, and 14 more were treated for shock. The attacker was chased by cops after fleeing the train.
German TV said the Afghan boy had lived as an asylum-seeker with a foster family in the Ochsenfurt district.
He was supported by the local Kolpingwerk society, an international Catholic charity.
He is said to have arrived in Germany this year and had been living with foster carers for two weeks after being housed in a refugee camp.
Local media said he boarded the train at his local station in Ochsenfurt, and cops said they believe he acted alone.
Shortly before news of the attack broke, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman had tweeted about the importance of successfully integrating refugees into the country.
A Foreign Office spokesman said: “We’re aware of an incident and are seeking further information.”
The incident comes just days after the devastating attack in Nice in which 84 people lost their lives, fuelling fears it could be another terror attack.
Evil fanatic Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel ploughed a lorry through crowds of revellers watching a firework display to celebrate France's national day.
ISIS later claimed responsibility for the attack, although some have suggested Bouhlel was simply mentally unstable.
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