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Tuesday 10 December 2013

Al-Qaeda Militants Are My Brothers – Michael Adebolajo


michael-adebolajo (1)

Michael Adebolajo who faces court for murdering a British soldier in London in May 2013, told at his trial on December 9, 2013, Monday that he loves Al-Qaeda and considers the Islamic militants to be his “brothers”.

A 28-year-old murderer was taken to London’s Old Bailey court surrounded by security guards, where he began giving evidence.
He and Michael Adebowale, 22, are accused of murdering 25-year-old soldier Lee Rigby in broad daylight as he walked back to his London barracks in May 2013.

The court has heard that the pair ran Rigby over with a car before attacking him with knives. Adebolajo attempted to behead him with a meat cleaver.

The defendants, both Britons of Nigerian descent, deny murder.

The soldier’s family sat just metres (feet) from Adebolajo in the courtroom as he said:
“Al-Qaeda, I consider to be mujahideen. I love them, they’re my brothers.”
The defendant, who wore a black Islamic robe, added that he has never met members of the militant group.

The trial heard last week that Adebolajo told police he and Adebowale targeted a soldier because they believed this was “the most fair target” in an attack aimed at avenging the deaths of Muslims abroad.

Adebolajo said that they attacked Rigby “for one reason and one reason only – that’s foreign policy”.

The jury heard that he was raised as a Christian but converted to Islam in his first year at Greenwich University in south London, close to where Rigby was killed, in 2002 or 2003.
“My religion is everything,” the married father-of-six told the court.

Growing up in Romford, east of London, he said that the “vast majority” of his school friends were white Britons. One of them had joined the army and was killed in Iraq.

Adebolajo said he held former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who sent British forces to join the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, “responsible” for his friend’s death.

Adebolajo tried to travel to Somalia in 2010, but was captured in Kenya and brought back to Britain, the court heard.

He said that before the brutal attack on Rigby, he had attended demonstrations organised by an Islamist group banned under British anti-terror laws, but then realised the protests were “impotent rage”.
“In reality, no demonstration will make a difference,” he added.
The defendant, who has asked to be called Mujaahid Abu Hamza in court, said several times that he was a “soldier” and that he did not regret what happened to Rigby.
“I will never regret obeying the command of Allah. That is all I can say,” he said.
He told police after the brutal attack on May 22 that he tried to behead Rigby because it was the most “humane” way to kill him, comparing it to halal butchery methods.

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