Looking calm and relaxed, it is hard to believe these are the last moments of Abdul Waheed Majeed's life.
The jihadist, thought to be the first British citizen to carry out a suicide attack in Syria, poses for the camera with his hands nonchalantly in his pockets, dressed in a white Muslim robe and black scarf on his head bearing the insignia of an extremist Islamist group.
Minutes later he would drive a truck ladden with explosives into the gates of a nearby prison, killing himself and scores others.
Today, Jabhat al-Nusra, the al-Qaeda-aligned group to which he belonged, released a 46-minute "martyrdom" video showing the moments leading up to his death.
Standing next to the truck he would use in his mission, he is approached by the cameraman and asked in Arabic to say some final words. Majeed appears not to understand and a third voice interrupts to explain that he speaks English.
Majeed can only reply:"Sorry? I can't speak. Everyone asks me that and... I'm not a very good speaker. My tongue has got like a knot in it - tell him, I can't speak. The ... it should come from the heart and I can't do it."
Born and raised in Crawley, England, Majeed, much like the hundreds of other foreign fighters in the group, does not speak the local language.
The camerman then follows Majeed, who is of Pakistani origin, as he drives the truck along a dusty road in Aleppo towards the city's central prison, where he blows himself up outside the gates.
The 41-year-old road maintenance worker, who is of Pakistani descent, is understood to have used the nom de guerre Abu Suleiman al-Britani while fighting with rebels.
Jihadists have posted eulogies to “Britani” on social media websites, with one saying: “All British Muslims should be proud of him.”