Cleric preaches that violence is part of Islam


By Duncan Gardham
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/05/01/nplot901.xml

Last Updated: 1:41am BST 01/05/2007



The mentor

At a scout hut on forestry land in Crawley, West Sussex, Omar Bakri Mohammed
encouraged his small band of followers to turn their ideological zeal to
violence, training them in boxing and urging them on.

It was at one such meeting that Omar Khyam, the leader of the fertiliser
plotters, first came into contact with radical Islam as an impressionable
teenager.

It was Bakri's boundless energy that drew together the various parts of the
radical group he had founded.

Living on disability benefit in Edmonton, north London, he drove round the
country encouraging members of al-Muhajiroun.

His friendly, sometimes comical persona belied a radical ideology, not only
pushing the establishment of a worldwide Muslim Caliphate and the black flag
of Islam flying at No 10, but also leading a group that supported violent
means to achieve those ends.

Bakri helped organise a seminar after the September 11 attacks in favour of
the "Magnificent 19" and went on to call the July 7 bombers the "Fantastic
Four."

In documents seen by The Daily Telegraph, al-Muhajiroun claimed: "Terrorism
is a part of Islam" and "Allah made it obligatory to prepare and to terrify
the enemy of Allah".

The article advised: "The kuffar of USA and UK are without doubt our
enemy.There is no such thing as an innocent kafir, innocence is only
applicable for the Muslims. Not only is it obligatory to fight them, it is
haram [forbidden] to feel sorry for them."

Al-Muhajiroun or "AM" included several distinct groups - Omar Khyam and
Waheed Mahmood became involved in Crawley, Anthony Garcia in east London and
Salahuddin Amin in Luton.

In Pakistan, after September 11, those groups came together under the
guidance of Mohammed Babar, an al-Muhajiroun member from New York, and
others, including allegedly Hassan Butt from Manchester.

Babar and Butt allegedly set up an "AM" office in Lahore, with Butt said to
have boasted of sending British recruits to fight allied forces in
Afghanistan.

At least two young men from Crawley and one from Luton were killed when the
allied forces invaded in 2001. Bakri called them martyrs.

Another young man inspired by Bakri was Omar Sharif, from Derby, a student
at King's College London who went on to become a suicide bomber in Israel.

For some, the attention drawn to al-Muhajiroun was unwelcome and it probably
encouraged the Crawley group to separate from it.

Six months after the arrest of the Crawley bombers in 2004, Bakri announced
that he was closing down

al-Muhajiroun but other organisations have been set up by his followers.

New York Police Department said last year it believed that al-Muhajiroun and
its successors had connections with Islamic societies in 21 British towns
and cities as well as student bodies, publishers and a software company.

In a recent article in the London-based Arabic newspaper Al Sharq al-Awsat,
a former leader of one group said: "The students of Omar Bakri continue to
preach on campuses."

Bakri now lives in the Lebanon and has been banned from returning to
Britain, although his wife and seven children still live in Edmonton.

In a sermon in English, given over a secure internet site by Bakri last
week, he talked of anti-terrorism arrests as a "good sign". He said: "When
you put people under pressure everywhere, I think you are leading to
explosion."

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