ISIS fanatics call for lone-wolf attacks on children playing in parks, pensioners queuing at bus stops and FLOWER SELLERS
A chilling magazine threat also asks for the 'blood' of market sellers

BLOODTHIRSTY Islamic State fighters are calling for lone-wolf attacks on commuters, pensioners, children in parks and even market vendors in a chilling magazine threat.
The terror group used the examples as it urged followers around the world to target non-believers in a 38-page booklet published in different languages.
It even features a picture of what appears to be a British market vendor along with the caption: "Even the blood of a merry crusader citizen selling flowers to passers-by".
The warped extracts also encourage fanatics to slaughter soft targets - including youngsters playing in parks and "the old man waiting in line".
The front page of Rumiyah is a picture of Abu Mohammed Al Adnani, the IS propaganda chief recently killed in an air strike.
A forward warns that the terror cell will not die with the death of its leaders, reports.
The rant also includes a four-page tribute to an Australian jihadist convicted over a 2005 plot to bomb the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
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Ezzit Raad, who travelled to the Middle East after serving time in jail, died fighting for IS in Manbij near the battleground city of Aleppo in northern Syria.
The group describe how Raad's chest was 'torn open by shrapnel' and call for terror attacks on 'kuffar', or non-believers, in Australia.
The chilling message says: "Light the ground beneath them aflame and scorch them with terror.
"Kill them on the streets of Brunswick, Broadmeadows, Bankstown and Bondi.
"Kill them at the MCG, the SCG, the Opera House, even in their backyards."
The magazine also features an article called 'The Kafir's blood is Halal for you. So shed it', which attempts to justify killing non-believers who are not fighting on the front line.
SITE Intelligence Group Director Rita Katz said the group's new magazine was "clearly... highly important to #ISIS as it has now been published in 7 languages".
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