Murdered: Drummer Lee Rigby with his wife Rebecca at their wedding in 2007. Their son Jack is just two
MI5 had been monitoring the two
fanatics responsible for the slaughter of a young soldier near Woolwich
barracks for eight years.
The
Security Service is facing an inquiry by MPs amid a raft of devastating
revelations about the killers’ known links to Islamist extremism.
One
of the pair – Michael Adebolajo – was so high profile he was
photographed outside Paddington Green police station six years ago
behind notorious hate preacher Anjem Choudary.
He was even intercepted by officials as he attempted to travel to Somalia to fight alongside Islamist terrorists last year.
It also emerged that Adebolajo was a violent ex-prisoner who was a member of a banned terrorist group.
Incredibly,
he was said to have been preaching jihad on the streets of Woolwich
earlier this week, only a few hundred yards from where 25-year-old Army
Drummer Lee Rigby – a married father – was beheaded.
As
MI5 faced accusations that they let the men slip through the net, David
Cameron ordered a full intelligence review by a Westminster committee.
On a dramatic day:
- Sources confirmed that 28-year-old Adebolajo once served a jail sentence for violence;
- Tory
minister Baroness Warsi attacked broadcasters who give airtime to
‘extremist voices – idiots and nutters’ after Choudary gave interviews
on BBC TV and Channel 4 News;
- It was revealed Adebolajo was once intercepted by police as he attempted to travel to Somalia to fight alongside Al-Shabaab;
- The Conservative MP Bob Stewart demanded foreign-born preachers of hate should be ‘put on a plane out’ of Britain;
- Heavily-armed Scotland Yard officers made dawn raids at six homes across London and in Lincoln;
- A man and a woman, both aged 29, were arrested on suspicion of joining the murderous conspiracy.
Previously: Michael Adebolajo was in a group of
Muslim extremists who fought with police outside the Old Bailey in 2006.
He had been arguing that he had the right to 'behead those who insult
Islam'
Terror suspect: Anjem Choudary (right) claimed
that this is him pictured with Michael Adebolajo, 28, (circled) at an
Islamist demonstration in London in 2007
Police chiefs described the counter terrorism investigation, one of the largest in recent history, as ‘complex and fast-moving’.
Adeolajo,
28, and his friend remained under armed guard in separate hospitals
being treated for gunshot wounds. They are expected to recover fully.
The
second suspect was reported last night by news outlets including
Channel 4 News and The Times to be Michael Adebowale, 22, of Greenwich,
south-east London.
Weapon:
This battered car was used to crush the soldier against a sign in
front. The streak of blood in front shows how they dragged his body into
the street
After the killing: Michael Adebolajo, 28, pictured on Wednesday, once served a jail sentence for violence
Fervent: The two young women who had comforted
the dead man speak to one of the killers while the 48-year-old Cub
Leader speaks to the other in the 20 minutes before police arrived
Mr Cameron said there was no
justification for the attack and the responsibility lay purely with the
‘sickening individuals’ behind it.
'This
country will be absolutely resolute in its stand against violent
extremism and terror. We will never give in to terror or terrorism in
any of its forms'
Prime Minister David Cameron
He added: ‘This country will be
absolutely resolute in its stand against violent extremism and terror.
We will never give in to terror or terrorism in any of its forms.’
The list of questions faced by the authorities was growing fast as evidence of the danger the two men posed to Britain grew.
Sources
said both men featured in ‘a number’ of counter terrorism
investigations in recent years but were not seen as a ‘threat to life’.
Yet Adebolajo, who was born in South London but is of Nigerian descent, was linked to Choudary as long ago as 2003.
The
former fitness instructor is believed to have been a member of Al
Muhajiroun, which was led by the hate preacher until it was banned by
the Government.
British citizen: The second attacker was named last night in reports as Michael Adebowale, 22
Aftermath: The men waited for 20 minutes saying
they wanted to shoot the police, but were gunned down themselves and are
shown here being detained
He was jailed at least once for
violence and friends said he was a member of a gang of knife-wielding
street robbers in his hometown of Romford, Essex.
Footage showed him standing directly behind Choudary during a protest outside Paddington Green police station in April 2007.
It
is believed he may have also been held by the Met in 2006 after
protesting outside the Old Bailey during the trial of four Muslim men.
The
defendants were ultimately jailed for their part in protests at the
Danish embassy in London against cartoons satirising the Prophet
Muhammad.
Men linked to Al
Muhajiroun gathered outside the high security police station after
Muslim convert Abu Izzadeen was arrested for inciting terrorism.
Unbelievably, it is also claimed he was intercepted by police as he attempted to travel to Somalia last year to fight jihad.
Sources said Adebolajo wanted to join Al-Shabaab, a notorious Al Qaeda affiliate responsible for terrorising the region.
The 28-year-old was seen as recently as
last week wearing white robes and a cap as he preached outside a branch
of Poundland in Woolwich.
Moved: Three young women prepare to lay flowers where the unnamed soldier was murdered brutally in Woolwich on Wednesday
Message: A handwritten note was also left by one
member of the public left distraught by what happened to the murdered
man Lee Rigby
Attached to a bunch of white roses, the neatly
written note is from a person who didn't know the victim but felt moved
to visit where he died
Delicate: A forensic officers examine a revolver
at the scene and places it in a protective box pistol close to Woolwich
Barracks
Residents said the former
University of Greenwich student was handing out leaflets encouraging
locals to support rebels in Syria.
The
second attacker, named last night in reports as Michael Adebowale, 22,
is believed to have been born in Nigeria before becoming a naturalised
British citizen.
'This is going to be a big blow to the new director of MI5, who has only been in the job for a couple of weeks'
Professor Anthony Glees, University of Buckingham
A woman believed to be his girlfriend was arrested during a raid at his home in a block of council flats in Woolwich.
Security
officials are currently monitoring more than 2,000 suspects and sources
point out they must target their resources on the fanatics considered
to pose the greatest danger.
They
also say MI5’s resources have been dramatically increased since the
July 7 bombings which has meant the number of suspects crossing the
‘radar’ of surveillance teams has itself soared.
Police yesterday raided a house which is
believed to be connected with Woolwich murder suspect Michael Adebolajo.
His father Anthony is said to live at this Lincolnshire address
Former home: Michael Adebolajo lived in this house in Romford with his parents while he converted to Islam as a teenager
Professor Anthony Glees,
director of the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the
University of Buckingham, said MI5 made the ‘wrong call’.
He said: ‘This is going to be a big blow to the new director of MI5, who has only been in the job for a couple of weeks.’
But
Patrick Mercer, a Tory MP and counter terrorism expert, said it is
‘impossible’ for police and security services to keep us ‘100 per cent
secure’.
dailymail.co.uk
No comments:
Post a Comment