[ now I understand why MMY don't like democracy :) ]

London a Longtime Haven for Radical Muslim Figures
By Patrick Goodenough

(CNSNews.com) - Terrorism experts have long warned that Islamists 
espousing violence enjoy a haven in London, an assertion that has 
come into sharp focus again with Thursday's bombings in the British 
capital.

For years, Britain tolerated the presence of high-profile and 
outspoken Islamic clerics whose fiery sermons frequently extolled 
jihad against the West. Since 9/11, however, anti-terror legislation 
has been tightened, some groups have been outlawed, terror rings 
have been broken and some controversial figures have been arrested.

One of them, Egyptian-born Abu Hamza al-Masri, went on trial this 
week at London's Old Bailey courthouse, where he faces more than a 
dozen charges include inciting terrorism and racial hatred.

Al-Masri was formerly the imam at a North London mosque linked to 
confessed al-Qaeda conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui and Richard Reid, 
who tried to blow up a U.S.-bound flight from Europe with explosives 
hidden in his shoe.

He also is wanted in the United States and Yemen on terror-related 
charges.

For years before his May 2004 arrest al-Masri used the Finsbury Park 
mosque as a base to speak for what he insisted were political causes.

Despite his radical rhetoric and close links to a group that claimed 
responsibility for attacks including the Oct. 2000 bombing of the 
USS Cole in Yemen, it was only in 2003 that the authorities acted 
against him, stripping him of his British citizenship and barring 
him from preaching at the mosque.

Al-Masri then took to addressing his followers -- mostly young 
British- and foreign-born Muslims -- on the street outside the 
building.

Britain also detained another London-based extremist cleric, Abu 
Qatada, whose sermons were found in the 9/11 hijackers' apartment in 
Germany.

But other radical leaders remained free, among them Omar Bakri 
Mohammed, a Syrian-born cleric who has promoted and praised violence 
against Israel, America and Britain for years.

Yael Shahar of the Israel-based International Policy Institute for 
Counter-Terrorism (ICT) said that although London had been a center 
for Islamic extremism for years, the British security services only 
started taking the threat seriously after 9/11.

Before that, Shahar said, "the firebrand clerics who preached jihad 
and hatred of the West were dismissed as 'armchair warriors' by 
British intelligence."

Even since 9/11, however, critics have questioned Britain's apparent 
tolerance for highly-controversial Muslim figures.

As recently as last year, the government allowed a visit by Yusuf al-
Qaradawi, a Egyptian cleric who has publicly voiced support for 
suicide bombers. London's leftwing Mayor Ken Livingstone, who has 
called al-Qaradawi a "man of peace," welcomed him as an honored 
guest. (see related story).

Exploiting democracy

In 2000, Bakri told Cybercast News Service in an interview: "We will 
use your democracy to destroy your democracy."

Britain's legal system and its willingness late last century to 
offer asylum to figures like Bakri, al-Masri and Abu Qatada made it 
a magnet for exiled radical organizations.

"In the past decade, the United Kingdom's undisputed political, 
economic, and cultural center has also become a major world center 
of political Islam and anti-Semitic, anti-Israel, and anti-American 
activism," writes Hebrew University of Jerusalem academic Robert S. 
Wistrich, in online excerpts of an article to be published soon.

"Through its Arabic-language newspapers, magazines, and publishing 
houses, not to mention its flourishing network of bookshops, 
mosques, and community centers, radical Islam has taken full 
advantage of what British democracy has to offer for its anti-
Western goals, reaping the benefits of London's significance as a 
hub of global finance, electronic media, and mass communications 
technology."

Osama bin Laden himself laid the groundwork for a London-based 
network, according to terrorism researcher Yossef Bodansky.

In his biography on bin Laden, written before 9/11, Bodansky wrote 
that the al-Qaeda leader based himself in the London suburb of 
Wembley in 1994. By the time he left, after the Saudis began 
demanding his expulsion, "he had consolidated a comprehensive system 
of entities" in the city.

In Nov. 1998, Bakri hosted a conference in London called Western 
Challenge and Islamic Response, attended by more than a dozen 
extremist groups. At the gathering, Bakri voiced support for Osama 
bin Laden's jihad and said recent anti-U.S. attacks such as those in 
Saudi Arabia and East Africa were "legitimate acts."

Following 9/11, Bakri was one of the first Islamist figures to 
publicly applaud the attacks.

Since then he has spoken often of his support for violent jihad, 
even admitting to signing up recruits for Islamist campaigns in 
places like Kashmir and Israel.

A number of governments -- including those of India, Algeria, Sri 
Lanka and Egypt -- have long complained about the presence in 
Britain of groups connected to violent campaign in those countries.

Extremists recruited in Britain for terrorist acts abroad 
include "shoe bomber" Reid, eight men involved in kidnappings in 
Yemen, and two men who carried out a deadly suicide bombing in Tel 
Aviv in 2003.

Bakri insisted that fighters were never recruited to carry out 
violent acts inside Britain itself, although he did say it was his 
dream to see the Islamic banner flying over Downing Street.

After the fall of the Taliban and its al-Qaeda allies in Afghanistan 
in late 2001, a member of Bakri's organization, Hassan Butt, told 
the BBC from Pakistan that British Muslim volunteers who had been 
fighting in Afghanistan would return to Britain where they 
would "strike at the heart of the enemy."

In an interview with a Portuguese magazine in April 2004, Bakri said 
attacks on London were "inevitable."

One "very well organized" group in London called itself al-Qaeda 
Europe, he said. "I know that they are ready to launch a big 
operation."





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