http://www.speroforum.com/site/print.asp?idarticle=7340

 



The London School of Economics was a locus for Islamist terror recruitment
yet universities are now rife with individuals who do not seek to share
common values of liberty and democracy 

 


 


Friday, January 05, 2007


Adrian <http://www.speroforum.com/site/author.asp?AUTH_ID=201>  Morgan 


 



 

Part II of a two-part article.  Read Part I
<http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?id=7339> .

In 1994, the Indian High Commissioner, L. M. Singhvi, claimed that Muslim
students at British colleges and universities were being recruited by
Islamist terror groups in India. The London School of Economics and the
University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies were claimed
to be places where students were particularly susceptible to such
recruitment. 

After followers of Hizb ut-Tahrir murdered Ayotunde Obanubi on Monday
February 27, 1995, at Newham College of Further Education, repercussions
ensued. The National Union of Students banned the group from its meetings in
the same year. In 1996, Omar Bakri Mohammed either resigned or was expelled
from the British Hizb ut-Tahrir group which he had founded. 

Hizb ut-Tahrir continued to campaign on campuses, intimidating Muslim women
into wearing veils, but it was not allowed to speak publicly or hold
meetings in student union buildings. With Bakri no longer an active member,
the group promoted itself as a "non-violent" organization, even though it
remained virulently anti-semitic and opposed to democracy. 

Bakri took his most violent and extremist members from Hizb ut-Tahrir and
officially founded British Al-Muhajiroun in February 1996. Bakri took on the
role of "Emir" or "spiritual leader", while his deputy was Anjem Choudary, a
former lawyer. 

The Institute for Counter-Terrorism last month reported on a recent
conversation (in Arabic) between Bakri and the newspaper Asharq Alawsat.
Here he said that Al Muhajiroun targeted more than 48 different universities
in Britain, including Cambridge, Oxford, Durham, the LSE, Imperial College,
Westminster University, and King's College. This figure is twice the amount
claimed by Professor Anthony Glees in his 2005 study "When Students Turn To
Terror". 

The London School of Economics, according to a 2002 report, was certainly a
locus for Islamist terror recruitment. In a report by UK intelligence, it
was claimed that Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who had became a student at the
LSE in 1992, went to Bosnia in 1993 and the following year became involved
in Kashmiri terrorist groups, including Jaish-e-Mohammed. He was arrested in
1994 after a police shoot-out following the kidnapping of three British
backpackers. He escaped from jail in 1999, and was captured by Pakistani
police on February 12, 2002. Omar Sheikh was captured for his involvement in
the kidnapping and beheading of US journalist Daniel Pearl, and given a
death sentence on July 15, 2002. 

Bizarrely, President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan states in his recent book
"In The Line Of Fire" that Omar Sheikh had been originally recruited by
Britain's international intelligence agency, MI6. Omar Sheikh admits to
meeting Osama bin Laden twice, but claims his allegiance is more to Mullah
Omar of the Taliban. Omar Sheikh is said to have financed the 9/11
terrorist, Mohammed Atta. 

The 2002 intelligence report claims that another student from the LSE
recruited for Jaish-e-Mohammed, and a third man who was arrested for
involvement in the 2001 attack upon the Indian parliament (killing seven)
actually lectured to Muslim students at the LSE in 1999. 

An official at the LSE claimed: "There was some activity in the mid-1990s.
Together with the students' union we checked that only bona fide students
were actually linked to the Islamic society." In 2000, members of
Al-Muhajiroun were physically expelled from a freshers' fair at the LSE
after trying to recruit students. 

Al-Muhajiroun declared that there was a "covenant of security" between
British Muslims and the UK, which meant that while Muslims were allowed to
operate there would be no terrorist attacks on British soil. In 2005, the
Sunday Times stated that more than a dozen Al-Muhajiroun members had gone on
to become suicide bombers abroad. These included Asif Hanif, who had been
one of two Britains involved in the April 2003 attack upon Mike's Bar on the
Tel Aviv sea front, which killed three and wounded sixty. 

In October 2004, Omar Bakri Mohammed announced that Al-Muhajiroun would be
disbanding. In February 2005, he declared that the "covenant of security"
had ended. Four months later, 52 people died when four Muslims, two of whom
had been university-educated, decided to enact "jihad" in London. 

Though Al-Muhajiroun was disbanded, it nonetheless continued under other
names, with exactly the same membership. It became the Saviour Sect and Al
Ghurabaa. These groups were still led by the "Emir", Omar Bakri Mohammed.
The Saviour Sect soon changed its name to become the Saved Sect. 

Changing of names is a tactic also employed by Hizb ut-Tahrir in its
recruitment drives, where its activists hide behind groups with innocuous
titles  - East London Youth Forum, the Debate Society, the Muslim Women's
Cultural Forum, the Islamic Society, the One Nation Society, the Millennium
Society, the Pakistan Society and the 1924 Committee. 

After the July 7, 2005 bombings Tony Blair announced in August that he
intended to ban Hizb ut-Tahrir. When Blair made this announcement, the
Islamist group which professed "non-violence" threatened to create riots. To
this day Hizb ut-Tahrir has still not been banned in Britain. 

The UK home secretary, John Reid, banned the former Al-Muhajiroun groups in
July 2006. This ban has done nothing to stop Omar Bakri's followers, as in
November 2005 the same core membership of Al-Muhajiroun had founded Ahlus
Sunnah wal Jamaah, under the leadership of Anjem Choudary. 

When Bakri fled to Lebanon in August 2005, he was banned from returning. For
two decades he had controlled young Muslims, urging them to claim welfare
benefits, to refuse to work and to never vote. But he continued to use the
internet to inspire his followers. 

In July 2005, it was reported by the National Union of Students that
Al-Muhajiroun and Hizb ut-Tahrir members were still trying to recruit
members from Scottish universities, using "front" names to avoid detection.
Imran Waheed, the head spokesperson of Hizb ut-Tahrir in Britain, said: "We
are an intellectual and political movement and we work in Glasgow, Dundee
and Edinburgh. Universities should be a forum for debate and we are trying
to overturn the NUS ban which we believe is completely unjustified." 

In October 2005, it was revealed that Hizb ut-Tahrir, under another name,
was recruiting at University College London, London University's School of
Oriental Studies, Luton University and others. Capitalizing on the leftist
students' love of the term "Islamophobia" to stifle rational debate about
Islamism, Hizb ut-Tahrir were operating under the title "Stop Islamophobia".


Anjem Choudary followed his "Emir" to Lebanon, but was deported in November
2005. Unable to speak or recruit at British universities, Choudary was
within a week addressing students at the historic Trinity College in Dublin,
Ireland. Choudary said that because Ireland supported the US (with its
planes refueling at Shannon Airport), it was a potential target for
terrorism. 

On November 1, 2005 Ann Cryer, a Labour politician, MP for Keighley, claimed
that one university in West Yorkshire was being targeted by members of Hizb
ut-Tahrir, who were threatening students. She did not mention the name of
the university, for fear it would affect enrollment, but it is believed to
be the University of Bradford. She said: "When I went to the university a
few weeks ago I was told that Hizb ut-Tahrir has taken over the Islamic
society and was preparing to take over the students union." 

On August 10, 2006, it was revealed that a massive plot, involving about
twenty British Muslims, had been halted. This plot had involved a plan to
smuggle liquid explosives onto several US-bound airlines. These were to be
reassembled into bombs on board flights, in the manner first outlined by
Ramzi Yousef in 1995, in his notorious "Operation Bojinka". 

One of the suspects in this plot was 22-year old Waheed Zaman from
Walthamstow, north-east London, who was head of the Islamic Society at
London Metropolitan University. Zaman was later charged under Section 1 (1)
of the Criminal Law Act 1977, as he had "conspired with other persons to
murder other persons". In relation to this conspiracy he was charged under
Section 5 (1) of the Terrorism Act 2006. - "preparing to smuggle parts of
improvised explosive devices on to aircraft and assemble and detonate them
on board." 

Zaman was a member of the extremist group Tablighi Jamaat. The Sunday
Telegraph visited the two portable cabins which served as London
Metropolitan University's Islamic Society, based on the campus at Hornsey
Road, north London. Here, they found literature and audio cassettes from
Omar Bakri Mohammed and Al-Muhajiroun. A newsletter found in the Islamic
Society called freedom of speech "undeniably one of the most central
deviated forms of moral decline that non-believers have developed." 

The problem of radical Islam on British university campuses is entrenched,
and any attempts to address the problem are met with whines of
"Islamophobia" from Muslims and leftists. Professor Anthony Glees received
hostility from Muslims and others for his 2005 report. The vice-chancellor
of his university, Steven Schwartz, wrote him a letter stating: "I have been
receiving some surprising letters from other v-cs (vice-chancellors)
complaining about your report. Some complain about your research methods.
Others seem to resent being lumped in with universities that might be
inadvertent homes to people bent on terrorism. One v-c seems to think that I
should (or could) shut you up." 

Glees runs the Brunel Center for Intelligence and Security Studies at Brunel
University. As he himself admitted in his 2005 report, Brunel was not immune
from the specter of jihadist recruitment. One individual who became targeted
for recruitment at Brunel was Jawad Syed. 

In his first year, Syed knew no-one but was befriended by Muslim students.
Gradually, they encouraged him to isolate himself from other students,
including Muslims. He said: "They were very much anti-western with
anti-western sentiments. And I clearly saw and experienced that they would
use any means to achieve their aims, including violence.... Once they've
established that basis of hatred they have you. And then you start working
closely with them, under their political agenda, in achieving their greater
aim." 

Jawad Syed is the protege of an imam who tries to "deprogram" young Muslims
who have been indoctrinated by radical Islamists. This man, Sheikh Musa
Adami, has been chaplain of London Metropolitan University since 2002.
Adami's group is called the Luqman Institute of Education and Development.
Despite his concerns about Islamic extremism, Adami failed to recognize the
extremist literature which proliferated in Waheed Zaman's Islamic Society,
at his own university. 

In November 2006, Adami's charity reported that Islamist activists were
operating at Brunel University, Bedfordshire University, Sheffield Hallam
University and Manchester Metropolitan University. The Luqman institute was
deprogramming up to ten students from Brunel University. 

The Sunday Times reported that at Sheffield Hallam University in 2006, the
Islamic Society hosted a lecture by Sheikh Khalid Yasin. This US preacher is
a convert from Christianity, who has said: "There's no such thing as a
Muslim having a non-Muslim friend." Yasin interprets literally the
injunction in the Koran (Sura 4:34) that men should be able to beat their
wives. 

The Muslim chaplain at London's Goldsmith's College is Shakeel Begg, who is
also the imam at Lewisham & Kent Mosque in Ladywell, south London. In late
2006, he gave a lecture to Muslim students at Kingston University. Here, he
encouraged his audience to fight jihad. He said: "You want to make jihad?
Very good... Take some money and go to Palestine and fight, fight the
terrorists, fight the Zionists." 

In October 2006, a lecture was held at Staffordshire University, entitled
"The true word of God - the Koran or the Bible." The lecture was given by a
former member of Al-Muhajiroun. 

Access to universities is still fairly easy for those who are not registered
students. On November 7, 2006, Dhiren Barot (pictured) was sentenced to a
minimum of forty years' jail for his plots to commit terrorist atrocities in
New York, Washington, Newark and Britain. Among his plans, the convert from
Hinduism, had included a plan to create a "dirty bomb" or "radiological
dispersion device. His plans involved the radioactive substance
Americium-241 and, as revealed by the Metropolitan Police Press Bureau, they
were not idle fantasies. They contained clear details (which have been
blacked out for security purposes) based on scientific information. To
gather data for his plans, Barot had used a forged pass to enter Brunel
University. 

Imperial College is a prestigious university in west London, with a good
reputation for nuclear research. In November 2005, it introduced a ban on
Muslim face-veils, as a security procedure. However, despite its vigilance,
this university is not without risk. On December 27, 2006, it was revealed
that investigators from Scotland Yard's Counterterrorism Command made an
extensive inspection of the university's security. They focused particularly
on the nuclear research facilities. 

The university has its own nuclear reactor, and with inspectors from the
Environment Agency and the Health Protection, Scotland Yard officers checked
the nuclear facilities, and took stock of radioactive isotopes. They also
did extensive inspection at Harefield Hospital, which has combined its
research facilities with Imperial College. 

The reason for the inspection has resulted from intelligence which suggests
that Islamic extremists have targeted Imperial College. 

Though the activities of Hizb ut-Tahrir seem to involve mentally "preparing"
students for the arrival of jihadist recruiters, in 2005, Mustafa Arif,
president of Imperial College's student union, which is not affiliated to
the National Union of Students, said of the group: "The culture here would
never have been to bar them. They were very small and died out about five
years ago. They are nothing compared with some hotheads you read about. As a
Muslim I find Hizb a nonsense. Physically they are harmless..." 

With such attitudes abounding, it is perhaps no wonder that Imperial College
has now been highlighted as a security risk. 

Britain's politicians and security services have not always been as vigilant
as they should be in rooting out Islamist extremism from either communities
or educational establishments. The leftists at Britain's universities have
not helped in the attempts to protect against terrorism. 

In November 2006, when the Department of Education and Skills urged
university lecturers were urged to inform police Special Branch of any
Muslim students who appeared to be extremist, Muslims, student unions and
universities condemned the suggestion. 

Preachers such as Omar Bakri Mohammed are still influencing British Muslims
to engage in jihad. From his base in Lebanon, Bakri uses the internet to
preach on an almost nightly basis. He recently said about terrorist attacks
upon Dublin's Shannon Airport: "Hit the target and hit it very hard, that
issue should be understood." 

Bakri explained his position clearly in 2004, when he said: ""We don't make
a distinction between civilians and non-civilians, innocents and
non-innocents. Only between Muslims and unbelievers. And the life of an
unbeliever has no value. It has no sanctity." 

The British authorities failed to act against radical preachers such as
Bakri when they began their campaigns of indoctrination. Such negligence has
ultimately led to homegrown suicide bombings and a climate of fear and
tension. 

Universities are for education. Because of Britain's complacent climate of
multicultural tolerance, universities are now rife with individuals who do
not seek to share common values of liberty and democracy. It is ironic that
in Britain's establishments of education, there are so many politically
naive activists who still need, more than anyone else, to be educated about
the dangers of Muslim extremism.

 

 



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