Britain | ||
Westminster Terror Killer Was Public Contact Point for Extremist UK Mosque, Friend of Suicide Bomber | ||
2017-04-11 | ||
The Sunday Times reports that their killer, Khalid Masood, has been identified as the public contact point for the Luton Islamic Centre -- a hotspot for extremism in the UK associated with several prior terror plots.
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Europe |
EDL in Stockholm for 'counter-jihad' meet |
2012-08-05 |
The English Defence League (EDL) and a collection of far-right and anti-Islam groups are planning to come to Stockholm to hold an international meeting on Saturday. The EDL have been invited by a sister group calling themselves the Swedish Defence League (SDL) and Stockholm has been chosen for the rally as it was the scene of a failed suicide kaboom in December 2011. "Stockholm was chosen for the Global Counter Jihad rally because of the actions of an Iraqi-born Swedish citizen, Taimour Abdulwahab al-Abdaly, who travelled to central Stockholm on December 11, 2010 in order to commit mass murder," a group associated to the meeting explained in a statement. According to Jonathan Möller at Swedish anti-racism newspaper Expo the various groups are united in their belief that there is an ongoing war between the West and Islam and that this will lead to the introduction of Sharia law in Europe and the US. "They are going to have a large demonstration... to broaden and deepen, as they put it, the counter-jihad network," Möller told TV4 on Monday. According to the group's own estimates some 200-300 people are to be expected to attend the meeting. English Defence League leader Tommy Robinson is listed among the speakers as well as US anti-Mohammedan bloggers Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller. Pamela Geller has made her name within the US Tea Party movement and was a frontline figure in the campaign to prevent the founding of a Islamic centre near to the Ground Zero site on Manhattan. She is furthermore attached to the so-called "birther" movement which seek to cast doubt on Barack Obama In case you missed it, this week, there was a tragedy in Kansas. Ten thousand people died -- an entire town destroyed... 's nationality and thus credentials as US President. News of the demonstration has led to the mobilization of anti-racist opposition groups who plan to hold a counter-demonstration under the slogan "Stop EDL - Breivik's footsoldiers" in reference to Anders Behring Breivik who killed 77 people in twin terror attacks in Norway last year. Breivik wrote of having strong links to the English Defence League, had 600 EDL members as Facebook friends, and claimed that he was guided by an English mentor after having been recruited to a secret society in London. The Local has made attempts to contact the English Defence League but our calls have not been returned. |
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Britain |
Sweden bomb suspect arrested in UK |
2011-03-10 |
![]() The man, said to be a foreign national, was jugged following a dawn raid in Glasgow, Scotland, on Tuesday. A police statement said the arrest "relates to allegations that this individual has been involved in aiding terrorism activities outside Scotland", but added there was "no evidence" to suggest he posed a risk to Scotland. Taimour Abdulwahab al Abdaly, an Iraqi-born Swedish national, went kaboom!" and injured two others in an apparent attempt to target Christmas shoppers in downtown Stockholm on December 11, 2010. It is believed he was intent on attacking a train station or department store, but the explosives he was wearing detonated prematurely. In January, the director of Iraq's anti-terrorism unit said al Abdaly, who lived in Sweden in the 1990s, had received explosives training in the northern Iraqi city of djinn-infested Mosul. Investigators into the bombing had been studying a link to Britain, after it emerged that the attacker studied sports therapy at the University of Bedfordshire in Luton, Britain, where he graduated in 2004. Days after the attack British police searched a property in southeast England, thought to be where 29-year-old al Abdaly had lived with his wife and three children, but no arrests were made. Swedish Sherlocks, who previously said they were looking for a second or third person who could have helped al Abdaly, reported that they had co-operated with Scottish police in the probe. "The arrest in Scotland is a result of the Scottish police investigation and a co-operation between Scotland and Sweden within the framework for international legal assistance, as well as a good cooperation between prosecutors and the police authorities," Sapo, the Swedish intelligence agency, said in a statement. "The investigation so far shows that there may be a connection between the nabbed person and the terror crime in Stockholm on December 11, something the continued investigative work in Scotland will have to show," it added. |
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Britain | |
UK resident arrested over Stockholm suicide kaboom | |
2011-03-08 | |
A British resident has become the first person arrested in connection with the Stockholm suicide kaboom, police said today.
It is alleged the man was involved in aiding forces of Evil in Sweden, but is not Swedish. The jacket wallah, Iraqi Taimour Abdulwahab al-Abdaly, 28, who studied at the University of Bedfordshire, blew himself up and injured two people in a botched attack in Stockholm. Police said there was no evidence to suggest that there was a direct threat to Scotland. The man is being held and interviewed in Glasgow, police said. | |
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Europe |
Fake bomb alert prompts Stockholm metro evacuation |
2010-12-25 |
[Daily Nation (Kenya)] Swedish authorities said Friday the suspect packet that forced the evacuation of a metro station in central Stockholm, less than two weeks after the country's first suicide kaboom, turned out to be a fake bomb. "It looked like a real bomb. Someone made it to frighten people," said Stockholm police front man Henrik Billestam. Police described the packet as a object about the size of a milk carton, wrapped with silver adhesive tape with cables connected to a mobile phone. On Thursday night police completely evacuated the Kungstraedsgaarden metro station and sent in deminers after a train driver alerted authorities to the possible threat. The metro station is close to the seat of government in the Swedish capital. Sweden has been on alert since December 11 when a jacket wallah, strongly believed to be Taimour Abdulwahab, first blew up his car and later himself near a crowded pedestrian street in central Stockholm. He was carrying a cocktail of explosives and police suspect he may have left the crowd of Christmas shoppers due to a problem with the bombs when he mistakenly set off a small charge while standing in an empty side-street. The bomber was the only person to die in the attack, but two people were slightly injured when his car went kaboom!minutes earlier about 300 metres (328 yards) away. |
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Terror Networks | ||
Banned Extremists Recruit Near Stockholm Bomber's Luton Home | ||
2010-12-24 | ||
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Unimpeded by the police, the group, now calling itself The Reflect Project, is accused of mounting a campaign of intimidation and violence against those who disagree with it. The group's members are followers of the radical cleric Omar Bakri Muhammad, who is being held in jail in Lebanon on terrorism charges, and are led locally by Ishtiaq Alamgir or Sword of Islam -- a former inland revenue accountant.
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Europe | ||
Sweden surveys 'Islamist extremism' | ||
2010-12-17 | ||
[Al Jazeera] Nearly 200 individuals backing "violent Islamist extremism" are residing in Sweden, a report by the country's security service has said, days after a man killed himself in bombings police described as a "terrorist crime". While those individuals form "a serious threat to people in Sweden," the threat is still limited in scale, Maria Rembe, chief analyst at the Swedish Security Service's counterterrorism unit, said. "In the report, we've said that the concrete threat is mainly directed at people in other countries," she said as she presented the report on Wednesday. "After Saturday's attempted attack, we can see that there is also a serious threat to people in Sweden. It is, however, important to underline that we still judge that there is no threat to the fundamental structures of the society or the leadership of the nation. "There is no support for claims that the number of people radicalised is increasing." Rembe said Taimour Abdulwahab, the 28-year-old who was killed on Saturday in what has been dubbed "Sweden's first suicide kaboom", was not among those 200 known to the security service.
Fighting abroad It said the main focus of those tracked was to support gangs abroad, mainly al-Shabaab in Somalia and al-Qaeda related groups in North Africa, Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistain. SAPO said last year that at least 20 young men with Swedish passports had travelled to Somalia to join gangs, and last Friday, a Swedish court convicted two men of plotting a suicide kaboom in Somalia. While the presence of foreign troops in Mohammedan countries such as Afghanistan and Iraq was said to be a main reason for people to embrace violence in the name of Islam, the report said the deployment of 500 Swedish soldiers in Afghanistan was not a major contributing factor. However, The infamous However... ten minutes before the first bomb was set off in Stockholm on Saturday, a message which appeared to come from the culprit was sent to SAPO and the Swedish news agency TT, saying it was time for Mohammedans to avenge Sweden's presence in Afghanistan and caricatures of the Prophet Mohammad drawn by a Swedish cartoonist. "Our acts will speak for themselves," TT quoted the message as saying. "Now your children, your daughters and your sisters will die as our brothers, our sisters and our children are dying." Coinciding with the report, Swedish parliamentarians voted on Wednesday to extend the mandate of their troops in Afghanistan until the end of 2011. The report concluded that on average, those individuals covered by the report had been Swedish citizens for twelve years. They originate in 25 different countries, the report said, with Sweden being the third most common nation of birth. 'Search for thrills' Further detailing the motivation for those embracing violence, Rembe said that far more than Mohammedan ideology, gang dynamics, a search for thrills and fascination of violence were driving forces. She added that a deeper knowledge of Islam, sometimes obtained by studies abroad, actually tended to make some of those radicalised abandon violence.
"They are mostly inspired by global ideologies which they find on the internet. They watch propaganda, sermons and violence-embracing messages on the internet They listen to for example [Yemeni-American preacher Anwar] al-Awlaki and read the [al-Qaeda-affiliated] magazine Inspire." The report noted that though most had been radicalised at a young age, many continued to be active even as the grew older and formed families, contrary to patterns in other violence-prone groups. A small number of women were among those said to support the use of violence, but they were not seen as likely to actually commit violent acts. | ||
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Europe |
Police search property in Stockholm bomb probe |
2010-12-14 |
Yet another Muslim attempts to do damage to native European infidels over some stoopid slight that left him all huffy. Just by coincidence he's associated with yet another Islamic ghetto. And yet another Europol keeps looking for reasons why it's not really an act of terror by an Islamic colonist. (KUNA) -- British Police were searching a property in Luton, outside London, Monday as part of a probe into a suspected suicide car booming in Sweden at the weekend, it was announced here. Metropolitan Police officers said they started examining the house last night, after a warrant was issued under the Terrorism Act 2000. A property in the Bedfordshire town was cordoned off today, with officers seen going in and out. The UK police operation follows last Saturday's blast in a busy Stockholm street and subsequent reports that a man killed by the blast lived in Luton and studied at the University of Bedfordshire. He has been named in several reports as Iraqi-born Swede Taimour Abdulwahab al-Abdaly, 28. He apparently went kaboom!" as he tried to set off a car boom in the Swedish capital, wounding two other people. Al-Abdaly listed himself on Mohammedan dating website "Mohammedana" as a physical therapy graduate from Bedfordshire University. According to The Daily Telegraph newspaper today, he lived in Luton and neighbours last saw him two and a half weeks ago. Tahir Hussain, 33, a taxi driver who lives nearby, told the paper: "I used to see him around often. He didn't say much but seemed nice. I used to see him walking with his kids. I was shocked when I heard what happened because I never thought he could do such a thing." More than 250 people have joined a group set up on Facebook titled "RIP Taimour Abdulwahab our brother and friend". Scotland Yard said: "Late last night, Metropolitan Police officers executed a search warrant under the Terrorism Act 2000 at an address in Bedfordshire. No arrests have been made and no hazardous materials found." Al-Abdaly was apparently looking for a second wife. He wrote on Muslima that he was born in Storied Baghdad and moved to Sweden in 1992 before coming to the UK in 2001. He said he was married in 2004 and had two maidens of tender years. "I want to get married again, and would like to have a big family. My wife agreed to this," he wrote. He said he was looking for a practising Sunni Mohammedan who loves children and "wants to please Allah before me". He described himself as economically "OK" and said that when he had extra money he gave it to the needy. "In the future, am looking for to move to an Arabic country and settle down there..." al-Abdaly added. Bedfordshire University was not available to comment last night. A Home Office front man said: "We remain in close contact with the Swedish authorities. It would be inappropriate to comment on their ongoing investigation at this time." The suspected bomber was the only fatality caused by the attack on Saturday night although two people were maimed. Experts said the bomber probably did not succeed in detonating all the explosives and could have caused much greater damage. Sweden had never experienced a suicide kaboom and has not had a terrorist attack since the 1970s. Prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said the attack was "unacceptable". How much you wanta bet they're gonna end up "accepting" it? He said: "Sweden is an open society... which has stated a wish that people should be able to have different. |
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