- Eritrean-born Ali will not face deportation because judges rule he could face 'inhumane treatment'
- The Home Office is appealing the decision and pledges to try to have him removed from the UK
Last updated at 11:41 PM on 25th September 2011
Hate-filled Siraj Yassin Abdullah Ali, graded the highest possible risk to the public, was released after serving just half of his nine-year sentence for helping the July 21 bombers.
He now mingles freely among the Londoners his co-plotters tried to kill six years ago.
Threat: Siraj Yassin Abdullah Ali has been using public transport
Ali was convicted of helping a gang of five Al Qaeda suicide bombers in their bid to repeat the carnage of the attacks of July 7, 2005, two weeks later.
Graham Foulkes, whose 22-year-old son David was killed on July 7, said he was ‘filled with despair’.
He said: ‘These people were plotting to commit mass murder - what about the human rights of victims and families?
‘These people had no consideration for the women and children they were trying to kill. How can they claim we should look after and support them?’
Accomplice: Siraj Yassin Abdullah Ali knew about the terrorist plot and failed to tell the authorities
Imposed human rights laws have left the authorities powerless to remove some terrorists and convicted criminals. Imposed by unaccountable European judges, they place the rights of the most dangerous wrongdoers above the risks faced by ordinary people.
The five would-be suicide bombers were jailed for life after trying to detonate bombs at Shepherd’s Bush, Warren Street and Oval Tube stations and on a bus in Shoreditch.
Thwarted: Terrorist Ramzi Mohammed is chased by
passengers at Oval Station after he had attempted to detonate a bomb
during the failed attack on July 21, 2005
He was jailed for 12 years in February 2008 for aiding and abetting the Al Qaeda cell. Judge Paul Worsley QC said he must have ‘harboured the hope’ the bombers would ‘destroy society as we know it’.
The sentence was reduced to nine years on appeal and after time Ali spent in jail while awaiting trial was taken into account, he was automatically released on licence several weeks ago. He is now living at a bail hostel on a leafy residential street in north-west London. He has been seen travelling on the Tube and catching buses.
With music headphones plugged into his ears and a bag slung casually across his shoulder, he appeared to be caught on camera chatting on a mobile phone.
It is understood that Ali is being monitored around the clock and must obey a curfew and other conditions, including a ban on using the internet.
He is the second high-risk terrorist linked to the July 21 attacks to win the right to remain in the UK on human rights grounds in recent weeks.
Still here: Ismail Abdurahman also helped the July 21 plotters and has since escaped deportation
The release of Ali and Abdurahman underlines the challenges faced by police, probation and MI5. There are fears that they will be stretched to the limit as they try to monitor dozens of freed fanatics in the run-up to the Olympics next year.
Research by one think-tank found that more than 230 people have been convicted of terrorist offences since 2001, but only around 100 remain in prison.
Under Article 3 of both the European Convention on Human Rights, and Labour’s Human Rights Act, individuals are protected against torture, inhuman or degrading treatment.
The clause allows foreign terror suspects to fight deportation on the grounds that they would be tortured in their home countries if returned.
In February, Lord Carlile warned that European judges have turned Britain into a ‘safe haven’ for foreign terrorists.
Appalling legislation: Tory MP Pritti Patel says the law needs to be changed
‘They should be deported instantly back to where they came from.’
Solicitor Cliff Tibber, who represents the families of several July 7 victims, said: ‘There is no doubt it is uncomfortable for the families to see someone like this back on the streets after what feels like an extremely short period of time.’
A UK Border Agency spokesman said: ‘We will do everything we can to remove this individual from the UK and are extremely disappointed by the court’s decision to grant bail, which we vigorously opposed.
‘In the meantime, we are working closely with public protection agencies to ensure that appropriate monitoring is in place.’
A Ministry of Justice spokesman insisted that public protection remains ‘top priority’ and that serious offenders face ‘strict’ controls and conditions.
The worse their crime, the more they're protected
ANALYSIS by JAMES SLACKSuch is the perversity of human rights law that the worse the crime, the easier it is for the culprit to dodge deportation.
This is particularly true when countries with a history of ill-treatment and torture, such as Eritrea and Somalia, are involved.
The British government will at least try to persuade the courts to send the convict back home.
Flashback: A London double-decker bus targeted
by bombers during the 7/7 attack. A judge said the failed 21/7 bomb plot
could have caused even more carnage
Routinely, prisoners claim they will be met from the plane and immediately tortured.
The British courts normally agree not to deport them – creating the bizarre situation where a terrorist or a killer has more chance of being allowed to stay in the UK than a foreign shoplifter or a simple failed asylum seeker.
Siraj Yassin Abdullah Ali certainly falls into the category of being an evil man, given that he knew of the July 21 bomb plot, but did nothing to alert the authorities.
Chilling evidence: A handwritten note detailing
the make-up of devices used during the 21/7 bomb attack found in Siraj
Yassin Abdullah Ali's flat
He was also a close friend of ringleader Muktar Said Ibrahim, who had a key to his flat and often stayed there.
Ali housed the members of the plot when the fumes in Omar’s bomb factory became overwhelming, and helped with the clear-up afterwards. At Ali’s home, police found handwritten documents relating to the construction of the bombs ripped up in his waste paper bin.
On one piece of paper were the words ‘detonator, charge and Allah’ in Arabic.
The second man linked to July 21 who is using human rights law to dodge deportation, Ismail Abdurahman, showed a similar hatred for the British public.
The Somalian provided a safe house for Shepherd’s Bush bomber Hussain Osman before he fled the country on July 26, 2005.
He also acted as a ‘runner’, retrieving a video camera and passport for Osman. The camera was apparently used to record suicide messages.
The judge who jailed five men convicted of helping the bombers, including Ali and Abdurahman, said they had shown no remorse.
Paul Worsley, QC, said: ‘You concealed your knowledge of the would-be bombers who were set to inflict even greater devastation than that of 7/7 which claimed the lives of 52 innocents.
‘You then helped them escape justice, leaving them free to strike again.’
It is a bitter irony that human rights judges have now decided that – regardless of the enormity of their crimes – they should be free to stay in Britain for good.
British men charged with terrorism
Posted
Six men have been charged with terrorism offences,
one week after they were arrested in a police operation in Birmingham,
Britain's second largest city.
Four of the men were charged with
preparing for acts of terrorism in the UK, while the other two were
charged with failing to disclose information, West Midlands Police said
in a statement.Irfan Nasser, 30, of Sparkhill, and Irfan Khalid, 26, of Balsall Heath, are accused of preparing for an act of terrorism, and travelling to Pakistan for training in terrorism, said police.
Ashik Ali, 26, of Balsall Heath, and Rahi Ahmed, 25, of Moseley, face charges related to planning a bombing campaign in the UK, the force added.
Two other suspects, Bahader Ali, 28, and Mohammed Rizwan, 32, both from Sparkbrook, are both charged with failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism.
The six men will appear at West London Magistrates Court on Monday. They were arrested in a counter-terrorism operation in Birmingham on Monday last week.
The men, all from Birmingham, allegedly committed the offences between Christmas Day last year and September 19, the police said.
A seventh man, aged 20 and also from Birmingham, who was arrested on Thursday, was still bring questioned.
Officers have until September 29 to charge, release or apply for a further warrant of detention for the detained suspect.
Reuters
UK police arrest seven in anti-terrorism sting
Updated
British police said they have arrested six men and a woman in Birmingham as part of a major counter-terrorism operation.
The
men, aged between 25 and 32, were detained on suspicion of the
commission, preparation or instigation of an act of terrorism in
Britain, Birmingham-based West Midlands Police said in a statement.Unarmed officers arrested the male suspects at or close to their homes in Britain's second biggest city between 11:30pm on Sunday and 1:00am on Monday (local time), it said.
In addition, a 22-year-old woman was arrested on suspicion of failing to disclose information which could have been used in assisting the prevention of an act of terrorism, police said.
Police said the suspects were being held for questioning in the Birmingham area.
"The operation is in its early stages so we are unable to go into detail at this time about the nature of the suspected offences," police assistant chief constable Marcus Beale said.
"However, I believe it was necessary to take action at this time in order to ensure public safety."
Police said the arrests were not connected to the conference of the Liberal Democrat party, the junior partner in the coalition government, currently taking place in Birmingham.
AFP
Three men charged with plotting suicide bombing campaign
Six men in total – all from Birmingham – charged over terrorism offences after arrests in city last week
- guardian.co.uk,
Three men from Birmingham who were arrested a week ago as part
of a major operation by counter-terrorism police in the Midlands have
been charged with plotting a suicide bombing campaign in the UK.
Two of them, Irfan Nasser and Irfan Khalid, aged 30 and 26 and from the Sparkhill and Sparkbrook areas, also face charges of making a martyrdom film, travelling to Pakistan for training in terrorism – including bomb making, weapons and poison making – collecting money for terrorism, and constructing a home-made explosive device.
Ashik Ali, 26, from Balsall Heath, was charged with collecting money for terrorism, stating an intention to be a suicide bomber, and involvement in recruiting others for terrorist acts.
A fourth man, Rahin Ahmed, 25, from Mosely, was charged with assisting others to travel to Pakistan for terrorism training, and investing and managing money for terrorist acts.
It is alleged that between Christmas Day 2010 and 19 September this year, they were preparing, or helping others prepare, to commit acts of terrorism.
Two other men, Bahader Ali and Mohammed Rizwan, aged 28 and 32 and from Sparkbrook, were also charged with failing to disclose information. It is alleged that between 29 July and 19 September this year, both had information which they knew may help prevent the commission of an act of terrorism.
Bahader Ali, who is Ashik Ali's brother, was also charged with terrorist fund raising.
Last week's arrests were unarmed, pre-planned and intelligence-led, according to West Midlands police, which added that a seventh man from Birmingham, aged 20, continues to be questioned. Officers have until Thursday to charge him, release him, or apply for a further warrant of detention.
The six charged men will appear at West London magistrates court in Hammersmith on Monday.
The arrests took place from 11.30am on Sunday 18 September, with the last suspect detained at about 1am on the Monday morning. The raids took place in several deprived areas of the city that have sizeable Muslim populations.
The operation involved MI5, with officers from Scotland Yard's counter-terrorism command supporting the Birmingham-based force.
West Midlands police said last week the "large-scale operation" had been running for some time and had been subject to regular review, adding that the action was necessary "in order to ensure public safety".
Two of them, Irfan Nasser and Irfan Khalid, aged 30 and 26 and from the Sparkhill and Sparkbrook areas, also face charges of making a martyrdom film, travelling to Pakistan for training in terrorism – including bomb making, weapons and poison making – collecting money for terrorism, and constructing a home-made explosive device.
Ashik Ali, 26, from Balsall Heath, was charged with collecting money for terrorism, stating an intention to be a suicide bomber, and involvement in recruiting others for terrorist acts.
A fourth man, Rahin Ahmed, 25, from Mosely, was charged with assisting others to travel to Pakistan for terrorism training, and investing and managing money for terrorist acts.
It is alleged that between Christmas Day 2010 and 19 September this year, they were preparing, or helping others prepare, to commit acts of terrorism.
Two other men, Bahader Ali and Mohammed Rizwan, aged 28 and 32 and from Sparkbrook, were also charged with failing to disclose information. It is alleged that between 29 July and 19 September this year, both had information which they knew may help prevent the commission of an act of terrorism.
Bahader Ali, who is Ashik Ali's brother, was also charged with terrorist fund raising.
Last week's arrests were unarmed, pre-planned and intelligence-led, according to West Midlands police, which added that a seventh man from Birmingham, aged 20, continues to be questioned. Officers have until Thursday to charge him, release him, or apply for a further warrant of detention.
The six charged men will appear at West London magistrates court in Hammersmith on Monday.
The arrests took place from 11.30am on Sunday 18 September, with the last suspect detained at about 1am on the Monday morning. The raids took place in several deprived areas of the city that have sizeable Muslim populations.
The operation involved MI5, with officers from Scotland Yard's counter-terrorism command supporting the Birmingham-based force.
West Midlands police said last week the "large-scale operation" had been running for some time and had been subject to regular review, adding that the action was necessary "in order to ensure public safety".
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