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Isis chief appears in first video
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Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of Islamist militant group Isis, has called on Muslims
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to obey him, in his first video sermon.
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Baghdadi has been appointed caliph by the jihadist group, which has seized large swathes
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of Iraq and Syria.
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The video appears to have been filmed on Friday during a sermon at the al-Nouri Mosque in
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Mosul, northern Iraq.
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It surfaced on Saturday amid reports that he had been killed or wounded in an Iraqi air raid.
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It was not clear when the attack was supposed to have taken place.
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In the sermon, at Mosul's most famous landmark, Baghdadi praised the establishment of the
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"Islamic state", which was declared by Isis last Sunday.
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Experts say the reclusive militant leader has never appeared on video before, although
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there are photographs of him.
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"Appointing a leader is an obligation on Muslims, and one that has been neglected for decades," he said.
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He also said that he did not seek out the position of being the caliph, or leader, calling it a "burden".
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"I am your leader, though I am not the best of you, so if you see that I am right, support
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me, and if you see that I am wrong, advise me," he told worshippers.
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Captions in the video referred to Baghdadi as "Caliph Ibrahim", a name he has used since
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the group unilaterally declared him leader of an "Islamic state" last Sunday.
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Shrines destroyed Earlier on Saturday Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
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al-Maliki fired two of his top security chiefs following the collapse of the Iraqi army in
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the north of the country last month.
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The chief of the Iraqi army's ground forces as well as the head of the federal police both lost their jobs.
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Meanwhile, extremists led by Isis destroyed at least a dozen shrines and places of worship
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in Nineveh province in northern Iraq.
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Shia, Sunni and Christian targets were destroyed, with images of their demolition being shared on social media.
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More than a million people have fled their homes as a result of the recent conflict,
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and at least 2,461 people were killed in June, the UN and Iraqi officials say.