Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Profile: Abu Qatada

Profile: Abu Qatada[EXTRACT]

Profile: Abu Qatada

Abu Qatada speaking on the BBC's Panorama in 2001

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Radical cleric Abu Qatada has been described as a "truly dangerous individual" and a "key UK figure" in al-Qaeda related terror activity.

The Palestinian-Jordanian, whose real name is Omar Othman, has for six years been fighting deportation to Jordan.

His defeat at the Special Immigration Appeals Commission in February 2007 had represented a major victory for the government's strategy of finding ways to deport terrorism suspects who it said could not be tried in the UK.

But Abu Qatada appealed on grounds that evidence extracted through torture would be used against him in Jordan, where he faces charges of plotting bomb attacks.

In January the European Court of Human Rights ruled in his favour and forced his release from jail, albeit on strict bail conditions. It left ministers seeking further guarantees to enable them to bring fresh deportation proceedings.

The 51-year-old scholar had arrived in the UK in September 1993 and claimed asylum, saying that he had been tortured in Jordan. He had been living in Pakistan near the Afghan border shortly before his arrival in the UK.

In 1994 he was recognised as a refugee and allowed to remain.

Islamist scene

He was among a large group of Islamists who sought refuge in the UK during the late 1980s and 1990s as they fled from despotic Arab regimes which they were seeking to overthrow.

Start Quote

In short, his views are to be found linked to many terrorist groups and their actions, providing the religious cover they seek; he propagates radicalising views, and his fund-raising is aimed at advancing the Islamist extremist cause”

End Quote Mr Justice Ouseley, 2007

Abu Qatada became an important player in the London Islamist scene - later dubbed "Londonistan" by its opponents - because of his credentials as a scholar.

During his early years in London, Abu Qatada preached at the Fourth Feathers community centre near Regent's Park and held meetings in his own home.

He was part of a broad movement that advocated imposing Islamic government on Muslim lands. He said that Islamic law justified taking up arms against despots and foreign invaders because they were the enemies of Muslims.

These ideas, which had been developed over many years, were part of the ideological roots of al-Qaeda's much broader justification of violence.

As the UK's security agencies tried to make sense of the Islamist scene, MI5 approached Abu Qatada on more than one occasion to ask for his help in minimising the threat to the UK.

By 1995, it was clear that Abu Qatada's influence was extremely broad, particularly among Algerian and Egyptian armed Islamists. His religious rulings were taken very seriously by those who followed him.

In one ruling that year, he said it was Islamically lawful to kill the wives and children of "apostates" - those who have rejected Islam - in order to stop the oppression in Algeria.

The practical effect was that armed Islamists in the country used that ruling to justify attacks against civilians on the basis that anyone who wasn't with them was not a proper Muslim.

'Views hardening'

Even as late as 1997, he was not considered to be fully part of the wider movement of international violent jihad, which al-Qaeda was coming to spearhead.

But the authorities believe his views were hardening, particularly after a sermon targeting Jews. And by 2001, the cleric had issued rulings justifying suicide attacks, as seen in a BBC Panorama interview the same year.

A Spanish judge, Baltasar Garzon, described Abu Qatada as the "spiritual head of the mujahedin in Britain" - so the question for the British authorities was whether Abu Qatada now supported "martyrdom operations" against Western targets.

The Security Service and police eventually concluded that Abu Qatada was a threat. In a court statement they said he was providing advice which gave religious legitimacy to those "who wish to further the aims of extreme Islamism and to engage in terrorist attacks, including suicide bombings".

The authorities said that a number of people arrested in connection with terrorism had described Abu Qatada's influence. Richard Reid, the would-be mid-Atlantic shoe bomber, and Zacarias Moussaoui, both jailed for involvement in terrorism, are said to have sought religious advice from him. The cleric's sermons were found in a Hamburg flat used by some of those involved in 9/11.

When Abu Qatada was questioned in 2001 over his alleged connections to a German cell, police found £170,000 cash in his home, including £805 in an envelope labelled "For the mujahideen in Chechnya". No charges were brought.

But on the eve of a new law enabling the authorities to hold foreign terrorism suspects without charge or trial, he disappeared. He was later tracked down to a council house in south London and taken to Belmarsh Prison.

The Law Lords eventually ruled such detention illegal and Abu Qatada was among those subjected to a control order, a form of house-arrest.

He was then rearrested and told he would be deported to Jordan, where he had been convicted in his absence of alleged involvement in a plot to target Americans and Israeli tourists during the country's millennium celebrations.

Attitudes today

What is not publicly clear is exactly where he now stands. Some influential Islamists have in recent years rejected al-Qaeda - in particular Libya's largest jihadist group.

Mohamed Ali, head of the Islam Channel TV station, says Abu Qatada has no links to terrorism

In December 2005, Abu Qatada made a video appeal to the kidnappers of British peace activist Norman Kember in Iraq. That recording, made inside Full Sutton prison near York where he was awaiting extradition proceedings, was broadcast in the Middle East. The question was whether this appeal was genuine, or simply tactical.

In 2008 he was briefly allowed out of prison on bail, while continuing his deportation legal battle. Mohamed Ali, who runs the Islam Channel on satellite television, has known the cleric for years and held talks with him during that period out of prison.

He told the BBC: "Abu Qatada has no links with terrorism [or] al-Qaeda and he never ever agreed or endorsed what was done in 9/11 in America or 7/7 in the UK.

"He said that if he had known that something was going to happen, he would lock them up. He thinks that jihad is limited to either defending Muslim lands when invaders come to Muslim lands or if force is being used to overthrow dictatorship regimes.

Start Quote

To suggest that he couldn't operate and pick up contacts and reposition himself in the future is probably a bold assumption”

End Quote Bob Quick Former Scotland Yard anti-terror chief

"He believes that the covenant between any Muslim coming to this country and the government stands and it should be honoured by both parties."

But Bob Quick, former head of counter-terrorism at Scotland Yard, doesn't buy this argument.

He said: "I would describe Abu Qatada as very dangerous, a man with significant influence, significantly well networked in Europe and the Middle East with very extreme views and prepared to promulgate those views and influence the views of others and their conduct.

"He was very well networked, very well connected, with al-Qaeda. He was an active supporter of terrorism and extreme Islamist objectives through terrorism.

"It might be dangerous at this stage to suggest his influence has waned.

"It may have waned because he's been in custody, mostly, for the last few years but to suggest that he couldn't operate and pick up contacts and reposition himself in the future is probably a bold assumption."

Such views are the reason successive governments have pursued Abu Qatada's deportation so doggedly.

Ministers obtained a memorandum of understanding with Jordan to ensure his human rights, a move European judges accepted meant the cleric would be protected from torture.

But they barred his deportation, ruling his likely retrial in Jordan would involve the use against him of evidence gained through torture, which is banned under international law.

In February, British judges ordered Abu Qatada's release on bail.

However, strict conditions mean he must wear an electronic tag, is allowed out of his London home for a maximum of one hour twice a day, is banned from attending a mosque or leading prayers, and is unable to use the internet or a mobile phone.

Meanwhile, ministers continue efforts to secure guarantees that Jordan would not use torture evidence against Abu Qatada ahead of a fresh deportation attempt.

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