Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg
Abdul Muhid Abdul Muhid al-Muhajiroun Britain 20060506 Link

Britain
Jihad From Jail
2012-02-20
Islamic snuffies using network website MohammedanPrisoner.com to preach hatred from behind bars

Abu Hamza, Abu Qatada and Osman Hussain are some of the snuffies using the site
Website is used as networking tool for jihadist turbans
Posts celebrate murder of innocent people and urge fresh atrocities against the West
Inmates urged to lie about their reform to get early release to continue holy war
Letters reveal prisoners are radicalising other inmates
Ministry of Justice said it recognises risk posed by bad turban offenders


Islamic snuffies are using the internet to spread their hatred from behind bars.

Dozens of letters written by some of the world's most dangerous snuffies - including those locked up for murderous plots in Britannia - have been published on MohammedanPrisoners.com
The hate-filled messages celebrate murder of innocent people and urge fresh atrocities against the West.

The website is being used as a networking tool for the jihadist hard boyz - many with links to al-Qaeda - and encourages the public to send emails, with the promise that their letters will be passed onto the inmates.

Its users include notorious hate preachers Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada. who was released under strict bail conditions, which include a ban on him using the internet, this month.

Leaders of terrorist plots targeting passenger planes and London landmarks are also said to have used the website, including Hussain Osman, nabbed for his botched attempt to blow up Shepherd's Bush Tube station in 2005.

It is claimed the website was set up by Abdul Muhid, a member of the banned Al-Muhajiroun group, who has served time in jail for inciting murder and hatred during protests over Prophet Mohammed cartoons.

The Sunday Times reported that among messages posted on the website, are some from Abdulla Ahmed Ali, caged for at least 40 years as leader of a suicide plot to blow up trans-Atlantic passenger jets.

Ahmed hails the 'humiliating defeat' inflicted on NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
forces in Afghanistan by the Taliban.

His message - posted last month - read: 'If the mushriks [non believers] can leave their families and sacrifice their lives and limbs to occupy, enslave and oppress the ummah [global Mohammedan community] then we too can sacrifice 100 times that to defend it.'

There are also jihadist messages from Bilal Zaheer Ahmad, nabbed last year after calling on Mohammedans to copy Roshonara Choudhry and murder MPs who voted for the Iraq war.

Ahmad's letters also includes calls for inmates to lie about their reform so they can be freed early to the continue their holy war and reveal bad turban material is freely available to inmates and that he is in direct contact with Choudhry.

Last July he wrote: 'I received a letter from that sister during the week. She said it feels like she was only locked away yesterday and the last year of her life has been the best.'
Choudhry, who attempted to murder former Labour minister Stephen Timms, is also reported to have posted on the website, describing the euphoria she felt from having the support of Mohammedans when she was nabbed at the Old Bailey.

Another inmate, Hamza Davidson, 34, who is serving a life sentence, is said to have claimed to be studying books by Bilal Philips, a Jamaican preacher who calls for homosexuals to be executed and was banned from Britannia.

Other letters reveal snuffies are radicalising other inmates. A Commons select committee report on radicalisation this month claimed one prisoner was persuaded to become a jacket wallah within 72 hours of arriving at London's Belmarsh prison.

The website also features jihadist video footage and legal experts have warned the website could have breached laws on inciting terrorism.

Labour MP Steve McCabe, who sits on the Commons home affairs committee, said: "Some of this stuff sounds dangerously close to incitement.

'If the prison authorities claim they are monitoring and censoring material, then they are clearly not doing it effectively.'

The website was taken down after the newspaper contacted Muhid - but a single homepage remains and features and email address fro people to send their letters, and quotes from the Qur'an.

Muhid denies glorifying terrorism, has offered to take down anything amounting to incitement and stressed inmates' letters had to be screened by prison authorities.

He said he did not intend to break the law, and added: 'Our role is to connect prisoners with the outside world...increasing the morale of these people.'

But Muhid admitted a disproportionate number of letters were sent to inmates with terrorism links and said the only just law is Islamic law.

A Ministry of Justice (MoJ) source said prisoners were not able to contribute directly to websites and that the department was aware of it.

An MoJ front man said: "The National Offender Management Service (Noms) recognises the risks posed by bad turban offenders and those who seek to radicalise others and takes their responsibility to effectively manage these risks seriously.

"Since 2007 a dedicated, expert unit has led a programme of work across prisons and probation to strengthen our response to the threat from these offenders, drawing on our long history of managing terrorist prisoners and other dangerous individuals.

"All high-security establishments have a dedicated counter-terrorism unit, and a national unit also exists to analyse intelligence from the High Security Estate.

'Noms' response to the current threat has included staff training in extremism awareness, the ongoing development of interventions designed to assist offenders in disengagement from extremism and the strengthening of the role of the Mohammedan chaplain in prisons.'
Link


Britain
Hate cleric's web of terror
2010-01-15
Jalal Hussain: Shared platform with preacher after 2yrs and 3 months for fundraising for Iraqi insurgents.

Ibrahim Hassan: Also joined Choudary at rally - after 2yrs and nine months for inciting terror overseas.

Death plotters
Mizanur Rahman: Jailed for 2yrs in 2006 for race hate - and 4yrs in 2007 for incitement to murder.

Simon Keeler: Got 3½yrs in 2008 for terror fundraising and incitement to kill Our Boys abroad.

Abu Izzadeen: Caged for 3½yrs in 2008 for terrorist fundraising and incitement to kill UK troops.

Rahman Saleem: 2½yrs jail in 2007 for race hate and 2yrs in 2008 for inciting terrorism abroad.

Abdul Muhid: Got 4yrs in 2007 for soliciting murder and 9 months in 2008 for terror fundraising.

Umran Javed: The 27-year-old was caged for four years in January 2007 for soliciting murder.

Bomb gang
Omar Khyam: Jailed for life in April 2007 for leading "fertiliser bomb" plot targeting Bluewater shopping centre.

Waheed Mahmood: Fellow Bluewater plotter - alias Abdul Waheed - was also given life in April 2007.

Jawad Akbar: Third member of the fertiliser bomb plot mob - he too was handed a life jail sentence in April 2007.

Anthony Garcia: Bluewater plotter No4 - the 24-year-old was jailed for life along with his evil accomplices.

Firebomb
Amer Mirza: Sentenced to 6 months in March 1999 for petrol-bombing a West London Territorial Army base.

Ali Beheshti: Maniac aged 41 was locked up for 4½ years in April last year for conspiracy to firebomb.

Race hate
Iftikhar Ali: Hit with £3,000 fine in October 2000 for distributing leaflets with intention to stir up race hate.

Zaheen Mohamed: Aged 27, slapped with a two-year community order in July 2005 for inciting racial hatred.

Dead terrorists
Aftab Manzoor: Member of Choudary's Al-Muhajiroun organisation - Manzoor was killed fighting in Afghanistan at the age of 25 in October 2001.

Asif Hanif: Suicide bomber blew himself up in Israel - and was another fanatical supporter of Choudary's sinister Al-Muhajiroun organisation.

Afzal Munir: The devotee of now-banned Al-Muhajiroun organisation was also killed in Afghanistan at age of 25 in October 2001.

Siddique Khan: The 7/7 suicide bomber is feared to have undergone explosives training at a Pakistan camp organised by Al-Muhajiroun recruits.

Al-Qaeda
Habib Ahmed: Terror group member was found with documents detailing "operatives" and was sentenced to ten years in December 2008
Link


Britain
Muslim preacher Abu Izzadeen found guilty of inciting terrorism
2008-04-18
A Muslim preacher who barracked former Home Secretary John Reid faces life in jail after he was found guilty of calling on his followers to train to be terrorists and telling them to kill non-believers to get to heaven.

Abu Izzadeen, whose real name is Trevor Brooks, 32, led a group of Islamic radicals who stormed the moderate Regents Park Mosque in central London and then forced back police who tried to evict them.

Izzadeen was found guilty of incitement to terrorism abroad along with three of his associates, Abdul Rehman Saleem, also known as Abu Yahya, the convert Simon Keeler, also known as Suliman Keeler, and Ibrahim Abdullah Hassan. Brooks, Keeler and two other men, Shah Jalal Hussain and Abdul Muhid were found guilty of collecting money for terrorists in Iraq. Hussain skipped bail while the jury were deliberating and is now on the run

The group delivered a series of speeches from the middle of the mosque in November 2004, which coincided with a night of the Muslim festival of Ramadan known as the “Night of Power.” They were found on a DVD lasting nearly five hours in which Brooks told his followers: “Allah will remove all the kufr [disbelief] from the earth, and how? With dua [prayers] or with some books? No my dear Muslim brothers with jihad for the sake of Allah...So we are terrorists, terrify the enemies of Allah.” Brooks said anybody who sought “dignity outside of shariah [Islamic law]” would be “humiliated.”

In another speech, recorded two years later in Small Heath, Birmingham, Brooks asked his audience; “Are you ready for another 7/7?” Jonathan Laidlaw QC, prosecuting, said this time Brooks was trying not to break a new terrorism law, making it illegal to “glorify terrorism.” But he said he had “clothed” his message in the words of Mohammed Siddique Khan, one of the July 7 bombers who left behind a videoed message. He said he was telling them “listen, absorb and follow the words of a suicide bomber.” Brooks told his audience: “These people have made a clear statement: If you stop, you'll be saved. If you don't stop, we're going to kill you indiscriminately. Now, you take the bus, you take the train? You could be the next target. You could be burned alive. You prepared to die?”

Brooks claimed his arrest was politically motivated after he interrupted a speech on fundamentalism by then Home Secretary John Reid at a youth centre in Forest Gate, East London, two months later, causing a storm of publicity. Izzadeen was a follower of the radical cleric Omar Bakri Mohammed, one-time leader of a group called al-Muhajiroun, who left for the Lebanon in the wake of the July 2005 bombings.

The Regents Park speech was found on a DVD recovered during a raid on Bakri's home in Haringey, North London, on March 15 2006 in the wake of the protests against the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Running for four hours and 48 minutes it covered a period at the mosque between 3.48pm and 10.15pm.

The police were called at 8pm by security staff at the mosque as the preaching began outside and returned an hour and 20 minutes later after the crowd had moved inside. But the crowd forced the officers from the mosque as they chanted “leave, leave, leave” and “out, out, out” as well as “Allah-u-Akbar”.

One female officer said she was pushed, shoved and spat at. Inside the mosque speakers referred to the September 11 hijackers as the “magnificent 19” and the audience clapped those who had “chosen to answer the call by becoming martyrs.”

Mr Laidlaw said the defendants had “crossed the line representing the boundary of freedom of expression by some considerable distance and become criminal.” He said that in the tape, largely recorded before the police arrived, “the speeches became progressively more emotive and inflammatory and insulting in their tone.” He added: “Much of what they say and believe is deeply, deeply offensive to liberal, fair-minded people. ”Their views are by ordinary standards, among other things, intolerant, racist, homophobic, and anti-Semitic. If others were to describe them and their religion in the language they use the defendants would understandably be outraged.”

The men will be sentenced today.
Link


Britain
Terror case man hands himself in
2008-04-18
An absconded defendant who was convicted of terror offences alongside Abu Izzadeen has handed himself in to police.

Shah Jalal Hussain, 25, disappeared while the jury trying him at Kingston Crown Court was still deliberating. He failed to turn up at court last Tuesday and police have been searching his home address and those of his relatives for any sign of him.

On Thursday, he was found guilty of fundraising for terrorists alongside notorious Muslim activist Izzadeen. Both men and four co-defendants were due to be sentenced on Friday.

Izzadeen was convicted of fundraising for terrorism and inciting terrorism abroad after a series of rabble-rousing speeches at a central London mosque in support of jihad. Simon Keeler, 36, was convicted of both the charges that Izzadeen faced. Abdul Saleem, 32, and Ibrahim Hassan, 25, were convicted of inciting terrorism but cleared of fundraising for terrorists. Hussain and Abdul Muhid, also 25, were found guilty of fundraising for terrorists.

Rajib Khan, 29, was cleared of the same charge. The jurors failed to reach verdicts in respect of the charge of inciting terrorism overseas in his case. They also failed to reach a verdict in respect of Omar Zaheer, 28, also charged with the same offence and a third offence faced by Izzadeen of encouraging terrorism.
Link


Britain
Islamic preacher 'recruited terrorists for Iraq' in Britain
2008-02-05
A radical preacher who heckled the Home Secretary tried to recruit Muslims to fight British soldiers in Iraq and raise money for terrorists, a court has been told.

Trevor Brooks, who uses the names Omar Brooks and Abu Izzadeen, and six co-defendants, claim their arrest in 2007 was "politically motivated" because Brooks once interrupted a speech made by John Reid when he was home secretary, the court heard.

In a video played to the jury, one of the accused, Abdul Rehman Saleem, praised Osama bin Laden and said Islam was a "religion of terrorism". He said: "Terrorism against the kuffar [non-believers], terrorism against those that terrorise us, terrorism against those that terrorise our women and children. Yes we have terrorised them so when they call you terrorist, be proud to have that title."

As the audience at Regents Park Mosque in central London, joined in, he chanted: "Oh Allah support Sheikh Osama, Oh Allah destroy America. Destroy the kafir wherever they are. Let their blood run in the mountains of Afghanistan, let their women become widows, may their children become orphans, let them be bombed. Let death come to them by the hands of the mujahideen [holy fighters]."

Kingston Crown Court, in south-west London, was told that the speakers referred to the September 11 hijackers as the "magnificent 19" and the audience clapped those who had "chosen to answer the call by becoming martyrs". When police arrived, after being called by mosque security staff, they were forced from the building by the angry crowd.

Along with Brooks, 32, and Saleem, 32, the other speakers included Shah Jalal Hussain, 25, Rajib Khan, 29, and Simon Keeler, 36, who called himself "Suliman".

The speeches were recorded on Nov 9, 2004, the day after US forces tried to retake control of the Iraqi city of Fallujah - attacks referred to by the speakers. The speeches were found on a DVD recovered during a raid on the home of Omar Bakri in Haringey, north London, on March 15, 2006, following the protests against the Danish cartoons of the Muslim prophet, Mohammed. Bakri is the self-styled "sheikh" and the former leader of the banned radical group al-Muhajiroun.

Brooks, Saleem, Keeler, Khan and Ibrahim Abdullah Hassan, 25, are charged with inciting terrorism overseas. Brooks is also charged with encouragement of terrorism. All of them, along with Hussain and Abdul Muhid, 25, are also charged with raising funds for terrorism. They deny the charges and the trial continues.
Link


Britain
4 jailed in UK for cartoon protest
2007-07-19
Four men in Britain were sentenced to prison on Tuesday for their role in a fiery protest against the publication of cartoons of Prophet Muhammad (may his drip clear up peace be upon him). Mizanur Rahman, 24, Umran Javed, 27, and Abdul Muhid 25, were convicted of incitement to murder and sentenced to six years each. During a February 2006 protest in front of the Danish embassy in London, they had called for the deaths of those who published the cartoons, prosecutors said. A fourth defendant, Abdul Saleem, 32, was jailed or four years for inciting racial hatred. The defendants had argued that they were venting their rage at the cartoons, which they considered an assault on Islam, and did not intend to incite murder. Judge Brian Barker called their actions “the complete opposite of peaceful protest.”
Link


Britain
Four jailed for hate crimes at cartoon protest
2007-07-18
Fran Yeoman of The Times
Four British Muslims who sought to “forment hatred and encourage killing” at a protest outside the Danish Embassy in London were jailed today.

Angry demonstrators gathered outside the Old Bailey as Mizanur Rahman, Umran Javed and Abdul Muhid were sentenced to six years in prison for soliciting murder during a protest against a publication of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.

A fourth man, Abdul Saleem, was jailed for four years for stirring up racial hatred at the demonstration in February last year.

Judge Brian Barker told the men that, only months after the 7th of July bombings, they had “subjected the multicultural citizens of London to a constant barrage of hatred and intolerance”.

Three of the men had delivered speeches designed to “persuade and encourage any radicalised and impressionable young person to perform a terrorist act in the name of religion” with potential for “indiscriminate carnage with which we are all too familiar”.

Rahman, 24, from Palmers Green had called for British soldiers to be returned from Iraq in body bags.

Judge Barker said: “Freedom of speech has long been jealously guarded by our laws but with freedom of speech comes responsibility and respect, none of which was demonstrated by you and your hardcore of fellow protesters.”

Outside the court building, a crowd of around 60 demonstrators held placards bearing slogans such as “Muslims rise for our brothers” and “British regime, terrorist regime”.
Link


Britain
Islamonazi Cartoon protest man found guilty
2007-03-07
A man demonstrating against cartoons of the Islamic Prophet Mohammed has been found guilty of soliciting to murder. Abdul Muhid was convicted on two counts at the Old Bailey.

Muhid, from Whitechapel, east London, led the crowd in chanting "bomb, bomb the UK" and produced placards with slogans, the court heard. Said to be one of the organisers of the protest in central London on 3 February 2006, halal meat inspector Muhid had denied the charges. Muhid, 24, was one of hundreds of people who marched from Regent's Park mosque to the Danish embassy in Knightsbridge. It was one of many demonstrations across Europe and the Middle East against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, which were first published in Denmark.

The court heard that at the London protest the slogans included "annihilate those who insult Islam", "fantastic four are on their way" and "3/11 is on its way". The latter two referred to terrorist attacks in London and Madrid, the jury heard. During the trial, David Perry QC, prosecuting, said: "The drawings of the Prophet had not appeared in any UK newspaper."

"This was supposed to be a demonstration against the publication of the drawings in the newspapers abroad. This behaviour shows what the demonstration was really about. It was an exhortation, an encouragement to terrorism."

Video footage seized from a mosque showed Muhid carrying placards into the building courtyard, the Old Bailey heard earlier. He was also seen wearing a jacket with the slogan "soldier of Allah".

Muhid was remanded in custody after the verdict
Link


Britain
Homegrown Terrorists Puzzle Britain
2006-08-12
LONDON (AP) - One was an athletic teenager who had grown into a devout young man, another a soccer-loving convert to Islam. The youngest was 17, the oldest 35. Many were born in Britain and all were reared here.

As police held 23 young British Muslims accused of plotting devastating airline bombings, both the authorities and their neighbors sought Friday to understand how ordinary communities spawned a terrifying plot. 19 names were made public Friday by the Treasury after the government froze their bank accounts. They have names of Muslim origin, including many that are common in Pakistan. At least 14 live in London, four in leafy High Wycombe, 30 miles away, and two in the central city of Birmingham.
Not a single Clive, Trevor or Nigel amongst them eh?
It is unclear how the men met or who the ringleader is, although suspicion has fallen on the only one identified who is over 30 - Shamin Mohammed Uddin, 35, of east London.

The father of three of the arrested men, Faisal Hussain, collapsed into tears, telling Britain's ITV News that his sons - Nabeel, Umair and Mehran - weren't involved any plot. ``They went to prayer and they were Muslims, that is the only thing they were guilty of,'' he said through an interpreter in an interview broadcast Friday.
They must have been listening to the spittle-spewing preacher at the mosque, Pops.
At least nine of the suspects lived in Walthamstow, a typically polyglot London neighborhood of modest brick houses and small apartment blocks, halal butchers, pubs and fast-food restaurants. It is an ethnically mixed community with a smattering of affluent professionals and a large Muslim population served by several mosques. ``Walthamstow's a happy, chilled-out community,'' said resident Hajra Mir. ``We weren't expecting this.''
Except in the mosques.
That sense of shock was repeated across the neighborhood. Residents said it is a friendly, quiet area where people respect their neighbors. Several of the suspects had lived there for many years and attended local schools.

But several men from the neighborhood have been linked to the Saviour Sect - an offshoot of a disbanded radical Islamist group, al-Muhajiroun, which was based in nearby Tottenham and gained notoriety for praising the Sept. 11 hijackers.
A-ha. Think we might strike gold if we dig there?
A Walthamstow leader of the sect, Abdul Muhid, has been charged with soliciting murder during an angry protest earlier this year over the Prophet Muhammad cartoons published in a Danish newspaper. He had previously been arrested for calling for the killing of British troops while proselytizing at a Walthamstow market.
There's your designated spittle-spewer. Now we need to identify the money man, the bag man, the chemist, the chemist's assistant, the messenger, and the operations ringleader.
Last fall, a rally planned by the group at a community center was banned by local officials after organizers distributed leaflets portraying an Islamic fighter holding a rocket launcher outside the prime minister's Downing Street residence.

Local Muslim leaders say the area's major mosques are vigilant about keeping radicals away. But several of the suspects appeared to fit the pattern of radicalization seen in the bombers who attacked the London transit system: young men born and bred in Britain, raised in moderate homes, but drawn to a more uncompromising version of Islam than that practiced by their parents.
Right about the time they have trouble finding a job, dating a non-Muslim girl, get introduced to life at the mosque, and meet the spittle-spewer. More biographical information on the attackers at the link.
Link


Britain
Race Hate Charges Against UK Cartoon Jihadis
2006-06-26
The hate charges are surprising because countries with those crazy laws, usually only apply them against whites. The other surprise is that nobody else published this story.
Four men charged with race hate crimes, including soliciting murder, following a demonstration against anti-Islamic cartoons are to be tried separately. The four pleaded not guilty to the offences at the Old Bailey. The charges follow a central London demonstration on February 3 in protest against cartoons published in Denmark satirising the prophet Mohammed.

Abdul Muhid, 23, of Stoke Newington, north London, pleaded not guilty to two offences of soliciting the murder of those who insulted the Muslim faith. Umran Javed, 26, of Birmingham, and Mizanur Rahman, 22, of Palmers Green, north London, denied soliciting murder and using threatening words or behaviour to stir up race hate. Abdul Saleem, 31, of Poplar, east London, denied one charge of using threatening words and behaviour to stir up race hate.

All except Muhid were remanded on bail to a date to be fixed.
Link


Britain
Jihadists issue threat to UK
2006-05-16
A new message appearing on a number of jihadi websites in the UK has warned the British government that "it is playing with a dangerous fire."

"Verily this Government needs to think carefully about the consequences of their action because they are playing with a dangerous fire, and the fire when played with will burn you or will give you a shock!" the message said. The warning was first posted on the al-Ghurabaa website, and later reproduced on the Saved Sect website. Both sites were created by followers of the Beirut-based cleric Sheikh Omar Bakri Muhammad, who was banned from Britain shortly after the London suicide bomb attacks, and who declared that Britain was a "land of war" a number of months before the attacks.

The most recent message accused the British government of carrying on a "crusade" against Islam, and cited the recent arrest of Anjem Choudary, an outspoken deputy of Omar Bakri. Choudary was arrested after being accused of organizing demonstrations in February in London against cartoons depicting Islam's prophet, Muhammad. During the protests, signs were held threatening terrorist attacks and murder. One sign held by a masked protester read: "Europe you will pay, Bin Laden is on his way."

"Following the recent provocation and animosity towards the Muslims, and in particular the arrests of Anjem Choudary and Abdul Muhid at Stansted airport on May 5 and then the attempted distortion and accusations against them by certain sections of the media, it has become crystal clear that the British government is continuing in her crusade against Islam and Muslims and is working tirelessly to silence the voice of any sincere Muslim," the online warning stated.

The authors of the message lamented what they described as a clampdown on Islamic scholars, and claimed that the UK government pursued a policy whereby "any Muslim scholar who teaches Islam will be deported, arrested or threatened with that in order to silence the voice of Islam from being heard!"

The al-Ghurabaa website contains another section entitled "The crimes of the British government," where it accuses Britain of "terrorist acts and crimes against Islam," including being "the main cause of the destruction of the Islamic State." The section also states that Britain "granted Palestine to the Jews by their Balfour Declaration… conspired against Muslims in the Balkans region… and fully support the barbaric killing of the civilian population of Iraq."
Link


Britain
Man in court over cartoon protests
2006-05-06
A man will appear in court charged with soliciting murder, in connection with February's Muslim cartoon protests. Abdul Muhid, 18, from east London, is charged with two counts of soliciting to murder and is due to appear in custody at Bow Street Magistrates Court. He is one of six men charged over their alleged involvement in the London demonstrations against the cartoons of the prophet Mohammed, first published in a Danish paper in September.

Muhid was arrested along with another man, Anjem Choudary, 39, on Thursday at Stansted Airport. Choudary was charged last night under the Public Order Act with organising a procession without the required written notification to the police. He has been bailed to appear before Bow Street magistrates on May 11.
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-12 More