Henning called national hero as UK mourns

Murdered aid worker Alan Henning has been called a "national hero" as British people united in revulsion against his jihadist killers.

British man Alan Henning

Britain has united in revulsion at the beheading of Alan Henning by Islamic State jihadists. (AAP)

Britain has united in revulsion at the beheading of aid worker Alan Henning by Islamic State jihadists, as the imam at his home city's main mosque hailed him as a "local and national hero".

Prime Minister David Cameron led tributes to the 47-year-old taxi driver who had travelled to Syria to deliver aid and whose murder was claimed by the IS group in a graphic video released late on Friday.

Henning left his wife and two teenage children in Manchester, northwest England, last December to drive in an aid convoy for Syrians displaced by war when he was kidnapped. He reportedly had "Aid4Syria" tattooed on his arm.

His family said they were "numb with grief" while British Muslims spoke out to condemn the killing.

"Alan Henning was our local and national hero," said Imam Asim Hussain of Manchester Central Mosque.

"We will remember him as a tireless and selfless humanitarian aid worker whose only concern was to help people in need."

He added: "The killing of Alan Henning was a cowardly and criminal act of appalling brutality by a group who do not represent Islam at all and in fact are an insult to the Islamic faith."

The Muslim Council of Britain, the country's biggest Muslim umbrella organisation, said his murder was a "despicable and offensive act".

Henning is the fourth Western hostage murdered by IS militants since August.

Cameron vowed to "do everything we can to hunt down and find the people who are responsible for this".

Henning was a "man of great peace, kindness and gentleness", Cameron said, adding: "The fact they could murder him in the way they did shows what we are dealing with."

Henning's wife Barbara and his two children said they had hoped never to receive news of death.

"We always knew that Alan was in the most dangerous of situations but we hoped that he would return home to us. That is not to be," the family said in a statement released by Britain's Foreign Office.

But Henning's brother-in-law, Colin Livesey, told BBC television that the British government could have taken further action to protect him.

"They could have done more when they knew about it months and months ago," he said. "I just don't think they did enough in my eyes."

Britain's parliament voted last week for its forces to join US-led raids on IS targets in Iraq but not Syria and now has eight Tornado jets flying sorties from Cyprus.


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