Terrorist from Australia
IN PHOTO: Robert Cerantonio (R), an Australian national and a Muslim convert, is escorted by police intelligence upon arrival at the domestic airport in Manila July 11, 2014. The Philippines on Friday arrested an Australian national with suspected links to foreign Islamist militants after he urged Philippine Muslims on social media sites to support conflicts in Iraq and Syria, recruiting them to go to the Middle East. The arrest is the first known link between Islamist militants in the southeast Asian nation and foreign jihadists supporting conflicts in the Middle East. Philippine Muslims took part in conflict in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Reuters/Stringer
Robert Cerantonio

The photo of Australian jihadist Mohamed Elomar posted on Twitter showing the Sydney-born boxer posing with decapitated heads went viral on YouTube. Elomar was even seen smiling.

The Daily Mail published the same photo taken in Syria but with the severed heads covered with a black square. It was posted by terrorist Khaled Sharrouf who has been taunting Australian police on social media with his gruesome posts.

The gruesome images doesn't stop there because he also tweeted about offering to Australians body organs sources from people whom he decapitated and placed their heads in a bucket.

On July 14, he tweeted, "u can't stop me if I wanted to attack aus I could have easily. I love to slaughter [Australians] & ALLAH LOVEs when u dogs r slaughtered."

Also on Friday, Sharrouf uploaded an image of heads of alleged Syrian soldiers being impaled on metal railings.

The pair, who reportedly use the pseudonym "abuhafs" and believed to be fighting with the terror group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), were previously jailed in Australia for a foiled attempt to blow up targets in Sydney and Melbourne. They are believed to have fled to Syria in 2013, with Sharrouf using his brother Mustafa's passport.

On July 8, Elomar's wife Fatima appeared before a Sydney court over charges of "preparing to enter a foreign state with the intention to engage in hostile activities."

Attorney George Brandis said that if the photos being posted are real, it is evidence of the serious crimes of the jihadist duo against Australia, which could possibly be war crimes.

Meanwhile, Director General of Security David Irvine warned that several terrorists have returned to Australia after fighting alongside suspected terrorist organisations in the Middle East.

YouTube/AustraliaProud