Archive for August 31, 2016

How YOU gave £1million to Sweet Shop jihadist gang

August 31, 2016

Revealed: How YOU gave £1million to Sweet Shop jihadist gang while they held ‘sharia surgeries’ and waged their campaign of hate

Source: How YOU gave £1million to Sweet Shop jihadist gang | Daily Mail Online

Britain’s most notorious Islamist extremists were bankrolled by more than £1 million of taxpayers’ money while waging their campaign of hate, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

A dozen supporters of Islamic State recruiter Anjem Choudary – many of them now convicted terrorists or jihadis who are fighting in Syria or have died there – were paid wages by a businessman who was handed huge sums of public money to run computer training courses in libraries and job centres.

And now a judge has found that the man – a close associate of Choudary’s – funnelled tens of thousands of pounds through front companies to key members of Choudary’s banned terrorist group Al-Muhajiroun (ALM).

A dozen supporters of Islamic State recruiter Anjem Choudary (pictured) were paid wages by a businessman who was handed huge sums of public money to run computer training courses in libraries and job centres

His firms included an old-fashioned sweet shop in the East End of London, in whose basement the extremists would hold ‘Sharia surgeries’ and discuss their plans for murderous jihad.

But, astonishingly, the businessman continued to receive grants from a Government agency nearly four years after his links to Choudary first became known.

Many members of the gang he financed and provided a headquarters for are now behind bars or fighting for Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, including:

  • Siddhartha Dhar, the IS executioner known as ‘Jihadi Sid’, who was employed as a printer maintenance technician for the training firm;

His firms included an old-fashioned sweet shop in the East End of London (pictured), in whose basement the extremists would hold ‘Sharia surgeries’ and discuss their plans for murderous jihad

  • Mohammed Mizanur Rahman, Choudary’s right-hand man, who is facing jail for supporting IS but once designed websites and did marketing;
  • Brusthom Ziamani, serving a 22-year sentence for trying to kill a British police officer or serviceman, attended ALM talks underneath the sweet shop and was on its payroll;
  • Trevor Brooks, behind bars for trying to reach Syria, was a ‘hardworking’ employee of the firm who ‘even did overtime’.

The businessman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was branded a terrorist funder by Ministers and had his bank accounts frozen after police and MI5 said he had enabled ALM ‘to exist and grow by providing employment and meeting places under an apparent legitimate veil of a confectionery shop’.

But he was never charged with any offence and has now won his appeal against the Treasury’s freezing of his assets.

Details of the astonishing state funding of Britain’s most notorious terror group have only emerged in the High Court case he brought against the Government.

The executioner: Siddhartha Dhar (left), 32, was an ALM leader and worked at Master Printers but is now an IS executioner in Syria. The lollipop jihadi: Trevor Brooks (right) was caught supposedly on his way to Syria just days after the Paris terror attacks

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/embed/video/1321835.html

Last night there was outrage that taxpayers’ money had been used for as long as a decade to prop up Choudary’s evil empire.

Home Affairs Committee chairman Keith Vaz MP told the MoS last night he would demand answers from the Home Secretary over the case and said: ‘This is a most disturbing state of affairs.

‘It is incredible that so much Government money has been spent on an organisation that supports individuals engaged in such activities.

‘The Government must ask for its money back from this company and there must be a full inquiry into this. I shall be writing to the Home Secretary asking for a full explanation.’

Choudary, 49, is now facing ten years’ jail for swearing allegiance to IS, having avoided prosecution for years even as his extremist groups were banned by the Government and his vile outbursts sparked outrage.

The trained lawyer became notorious when ALM celebrated the 9/11 hijackers as the ‘magnificent 19’ and Choudary inspired a generation of British terrorists including Lee Rigby murderer Michael Adebolajo.

But it has never been revealed until now that ALM was relying on Government money to stir up hate against Britain.

The knifeman: Brusthom Ziamani (left) is serving 22 years for plotting to behead a soldier. The protester: Abdul Muhid (right) was jailed for his role in the Danish embassy demonstration

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/embed/video/1161208.html

According to the High Court judgment published last Friday, the businessman – identified only as ‘C’ – set up Best Training Solutions in 2001 and soon started getting Government grants to help people get jobs by giving them basic computer skills.

It became ‘very successful’ and at one stage had a turnover of £1.4 million, employed some 40 people, operated four branches and ran partnerships with ten libraries and community centres as well as having ‘a presence’ in 20 Jobcentres.

The judge, Mr Justice Cranston, said 95 per cent of its turnover came from public money.

Choudary’s associate ‘C’ also set up a printing firm called Master Printers and an old-fashioned sweet shop called Yummy Sweets, later known as Yummy Yummy, and kept them afloat by diverting at least £693,663 to their bank accounts from the state-funded Best Training.

And according to the judgment, 12 of the sweet shop’s 13 employees were members of ALM and many also had roles in the training firms.

In addition, the cellar of a terraced building used by Master Printers and Yummy Yummy in East London became a key meeting place for the extremists.

But even after Best Training’s links to Choudary were exposed in 2011, its state funding continued.The

The deputy: Mohammed Mizanur Rahman (left) is awaiting a lengthy jail term for inviting support for IS. The boxer: Anthony Small (right) was cleared last year of plotting to join IS

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/embed/video/1321915.html

Figures seen by this newspaper show the training firm received £1,187,883 of public money from the Skills Funding Agency between 2012 and 2014 alone.

Eventually, in September 2014, police searched the associate’s home and offices and arrested him along with ten other people on suspicion of terror offences.

In the headquarters, officers found ‘a list of Muslim prisoners, including some sentenced for terrorist offences’ and an IS flag.

When questioned by police, C ‘denied knowledge of any of those items’ and was not charged with any offence.

However the High Court heard that a Detective Sergeant Collins believed that ‘without C’s support, ALM could not have functioned’ at the New Road address.

Police believed, according to the court judgment, that the associate ‘was using substantial profits from Best Training to subsidise the failing enterprise Yummy Sweets, the employees of which were all members of ALM’.

He had ‘enabled the group to exist and grow by providing employment and meeting places under an apparent legitimate veil of a confectionery shop’.

The convert: Simon Keeler, 44, (pictured) a builder at Yummy Sweets, was previously convicted of terror fundraising

As a result, C was designated under the Terrorist Asset-Freezing Act 2010 in February 2015.

But a judge has now allowed his appeal because C claims he no longer has any money with which to fund terrorism.

The MoS knows the identity of C, who declined to comment on the judgment yesterday.

A Skills Funding Agency spokesman said it was made aware in 2014 that the police were investigating Best Training.

‘The SFA worked in full co-operation with the police which resulted in Best Training being suspended with immediate effect from SFA’s register of training providers and Government funding ceased.’

Does The Death of ISIS #2 Man Mean We’re Winning?

August 31, 2016

Does The Death of ISIS #2 Man Mean We’re Winning? Clarion Project, Elliot Friedland, August 31, 2016

Iraq-US-drone-MQ-1B-predator-wikimedia-commons-640-320An MQ-1B Predator Drone takes off from a US airbase in Iraq. (Photo: © Wikimedia Commons)

[A] concerted effort to delegitimize and deconstruct the underlying ideology of Islamism is the only way to secure a lasting solution to the problem of jihadist terrorism.

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Islamic State (ISIS, ISIL) spokesperson Mohammed al-Adnani, who was reportedly tipped to be the successor to self-styled Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, has been killed in Aleppo, Syria, according to an ISIS announcement.

ISIS-adnani-dead

The Islamic State has vowed to exact revenge for his death.

The Pentagon confirmed they targeted al-Adnani with a drone strike.

“We are still assessing the results of the strike, but al-Adnani’s removal from the battlefield would mark another significant blow to ISIS,” Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said in a statement.

“Al-Adnani has served as principal architect of ISIS’ external operations and as ISIS’ chief spokesman. He has coordinated the movement of ISIS fighters, directly encouraged lone-wolf attacks on civilians and members of the military and actively recruited new ISIS members,” he said, explaining the importance of al-Adnani to the Islamic State.

Adnani was thought to be behind the Paris attacks, according to CNN.

Yet, however important al-Adnani was, he was still just one man. Killing terrorist leaders is important. But until the radical Islamist ideology that spawns terrorism is eradicated, this “War on Terror” will continue to resemble whack-a-mole.

ISIS has no shortage of eager jihadists ready to take his place and who can be trained to fulfill his role. Perhaps they will not succeed as well as he has, perhaps they will do even better.

The elimination of individual jihadists, while important, has not significantly eroded terrorism in the past.

On the contrary, more jihadists have simply stepped forward.

Islamist preacher Anwar al-Awlaki was killed in a drone strike in Yemen in 2011, yet his teachings still influenced Omar Mateen to massacre revelers at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando Florida.

When Osama bin Laden was killed in a drone strike in 2011, Aymen al-Zawahiri took over as leader of Al-Qaeda. Bin Laden’s son Hamza released an audio message earlier this year calling on Saudis to overthrow their government.

Since the “War on Terror” began in 2001, global terrorism has increased. According to the Global Terrorism Index fatalities caused by terrorism increased from 3,361 in 2000 to 11,133 in 2012 and 18,111 in 2013. In 2014 the figure was even higher, with 32,658 fatalities.

ISIS and Boko Haram (which pledged allegiance to the Islamic State) were jointly responsibe for 51% of those deaths.

This is despite Obama’s drone strike program killing from 2,372 to 2,581 combatants with drone strikes between January 20, 2009 and December 31, 2015 according to official White House figures, not including deaths from air strikes in Afghanistan, Iraq or Syria.

The administration claims to have killed 64 to 116 civilians in drone strikes over the same time period, a number that human rights and monitoring groups have slammed as being much lower than the real figure.

The Obama administration has killed up to 10 times as many terrorists in drone strikes as the Bush administration did, depending on which figures you use, yet terrorism increased.

Last year the number of terror attacks dropped.

“The total number of terrorist attacks in 2015 decreased by 13% and total deaths due to terrorist attacks (28,328) decreased by 14%, compared to 2014,” the US annual Country Reports on Terrorism stated.

Advances of Kurdish and Iraqi government forces and airstrikes on Islamic State oil fields probably had a lot more to do with the reduction than the killing of any one man, no matter how important.

Yet, as the Islamic State loses territory in its base of Iraq and Syria, they threaten to expand their terror attacks abroad.

Therefore a concerted effort to delegitimize and deconstruct the underlying ideology of Islamism is the only way to secure a lasting solution to the problem of jihadist terrorism. Defeating ISIS and similar groups must occur both on the battlefield, to deny them the freedom of movement and operation which enables them to plan and execute attacks, and in the realm of ideas.