One of the suspected killers who attempted to behead and
disembowel a young soldier in the horrific Woolwich attack had listened
to the preachings of a radical Muslim cleric banned from Britain over
extremist activities, including alleged links to al-Qa’ida.
The cleric Omar Bakri Mohammed has been secretly filmed stating that decapitation of the enemies of Islam was permitted.
Today,
in comments met with outrage, he told that he could understand the
feeling of rage that had motivated the attackers and that what they had
done could be justified under certain interpretations of Islam.
Michael
Adebolajo, a British-Muslim convert of Nigerian origin who gave a video
interview with a meat cleaver in his bloodied hands while the body of
25-year-old Drummer Lee Rigby lay on the street behind him, declared
that he was fighting for “Almighty Allah”.
Last night the second suspect was understood to be Michael Adebowale, 22, of Greenwich.
Mr
Bakri Muhammed, who now lives in Lebanon, said: “I saw the film and we
could see that he [the suspect] was being very courageous.
“Under
Islam this can be justified, he was not targeting civilians, he was
taking on a military man in an operation. To people around here [in the
Middle East] he is a hero for what he has done.”
Mr Bakri Muhammed
said of the suspect: “I knew him as Michael when he came to the
meetings and then he converted and he became known as Abdullah. I hear
he then started calling himself Mujahid. He asked questions about
religion, he was curious.
He had first started coming when there
was a lot of anger about the Iraq war and the war on terror. Whether I
influenced him or not, I do not know. But he was a quiet boy, so
something must have happened.”
In other developments, two new
arrests were made: a man and a woman on suspicion of conspiracy to
murder, following raids at six addresses in London and Lincoln.
Shocking footage also surfaced of the pair being shot by armed response officers from the Metropolitan Police.
The video below shows one of the men charge at police and drop one of his knives before being gunned down.
His
accomplice is seen raising his arm and aiming a handgun at officers
before he too is downed, as eight shots ring out in total.
It also
emerged that the two suspected killers of Drummer Rigby were already
known to MI5 and, almost certainly, to counter-terrorism officers in the
police. One of the men was stopped from travelling to Somalia to join
the Islamist militia Al-Shabaab last year.
Security officials
insisted that there had been no evidence that either of the two men were
planning an imminent attack. Nor was there any evidence, they say, that
they were discussing beheading. They point out that there were plenty
of references to it in Islamist websites.
In 2007, following the
conviction of a group British Pakistanis who had plotted to kidnap and
behead a British soldier, a secret recording emerged of Mr Bakri
Muhammed saying: “When you meet [Westerners], slice their own necks. And
when you make the blood spill all over, and the enemy becomes so tired,
now start to take from them prisoners. Then free them or exchange them
until the war is finished.
“Verily
they remind the sunnah of removing the head of the enemy. They remind
the sunnah of slaughtering the enemy. They remind the sunnah of how to
strike the neck of the enemy. They removed the head of the enemy. Use
the sword and remove the head of the enemy.”
In another message,
Mr Bakri Muhammed had said he hoped that “British Muslims who are in the
Army over there” (Afghanistan) can be captured.
Mr Bakri
Muhammed, who is Syrian-born, and has named one of his sons after Osama
bin Laden, stated that he and his followers were not involved in
violence while residing in the UK due to what had become known as the
“covenant of security” under which Islamist organisations were allowed
to carry out their activities, but desisted from taking armed action in
the country which had given them refuge.
“But in this case obviously the covenant of security did not apply,” he said.
“Beheading
is how criminals were executed under the laws, but that must happen
with a Sharia court and decision by judges with criminals. On this
occasion he was taking military action, not a legal one.”
Mr Bakri
Muhammed had set up the organization Hizb ut-Tahrir in the UK, where he
had claimed asylum in 1986, but split with them after doctrinal
disagreements and set up the Al-Muhajiroun group which attracted
hundreds of followers including Adebolajo.
That was also wound up but at least a dozen of its members are thought to have become or affiliated to suicide bombers.
Mr Bakri Muhammed left London soon after the 2005 bombings because, he said, of constant harassment by the authorities.
When
Israel carried out attacks on Lebanon during its war with Hizbullah a
year later he attempted to join civilians being evacuated from Lebanon
by the British military, but was refused.
He protested at the
time: “What concerns me is my safety. I’d be happy with a month’s visa
but this morning they told me I couldn’t because I’m not a British
citizen any more.”
He was subsequently informed by the UK
government that he would not be allowed to return here. Since then Mr
Bakri Muhammed had repeatedly warned that the foreign policy being
pursued by the UK would lead to retaliation by Muslims in the West and
states would be powerless to prevent this.
A 29-year-old woman at a home in south London, and a man of the same age, were arrested in arrested at an undisclosed location.
The
two men shot by police remain in hospital with non-fatal injuries but
it is understood officers are yet to interview the pair. It emerged that
the shooting was captured by a council camera. Two officers fired their
guns and a third fired a taser weapon, the Independent Police
Complaints Commission said.
“Angel” did not want victim to die alone
The
son of a woman who became known as the “angel” of the Woolwich attacks
has spoken about what made his mother stay praying by the side of dying
soldier Lee Rigby.
He said: “She just thought at the time, imagine
if that was my son. No one wants to die with no one by their side. She
just wanted to comfort the guy.” He did not want to be named.
Family friend Joe Tallant said: “She wanted to comfort the man… She put her hands on his chest and prayed.”
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