Al-Janko was born in
Turkey, the fourth son of 11 children, and was four years old when his Kurdish parents were killed by Turkish troops in 1980. He was subsequently taken to
Syria by his stepparents for the next ten years, before his
Salafist stepfather took a teaching position in
Ajman, UAE in 1990, and his stepmother and siblings brought him to Ajman a couple years later. Al-Janko attended
Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University in the Emirates from 1998 to 2000, studying law and literature, together with
Faiz Mohammed Ahmed Al Kandari and
Abd Al Aziz Sayer Uwain Al Shammeri. He told interrogators he was invited to a college party at a local hotel however, by Prince Fisal Sudid Qasmi, before he left. He says that when he arrived,
group sex was underway and he participated in the orgy; but Qasmi later blackmailed him, threatening to expose the videotape to his stepfather or the media, unless al-Janko would agree to spy on professors and students advocating travel for
jihad. He later retracted this statement as being coerced under torture, and dismissed his admissions of drug addiction, homosexuality and spying as all being false. Al-Janko later told his lawyers he ended up in Afghanistan after running away from his "strict Muslim [step]father". whom he complained was "controlling, abusive and violent" and "ran away" six months after the alleged blackmail began, telling interrogators that he had unsuccessfully spoken to the embassies of Canada, Syria and the United States, seeking an opportunity to leave the Emirates behind, but eventually colleagues at the Mosab bin Omer Center, in the Mishref neighbourhood of
Ajman, convinced him he could travel to Afghanistan by simply posing as an illegal Afghan migrant worker in the UAE, and then apply to Western countries for asylum as an Afghan refugee. al-Janko claims he successfully impersonated an illegal worker, and successfully got himself "deported" to Afghanistan at the expense of the Emirati government. In Afghanistan, al-Janko used the name
Dujana al-Kurdi, and spent 18–45 days at Al Farouq training camp, where he claims to have spent his time doing "menial chores" such as chopping wood, cleaning weapons and hauling water, until a commander named al-Saidi turned him over to Atef and
Saif al-Adel at the
Ghulam Bachi safehouse on suspicion he was a spy. Al-Janko maintains this was likely because the day he was ordered to prepare to fight on the
front lines, he requested permission to leave the camp, fearing for his safety. ==Imprisonment by Taliban==