Several times,
British spies attempted to get the brother of Woolwich murder suspect Michael
Adebolajo to supply it information on terrorism networks around the world,
reports Daily Mail
British spies approached the brother
of Woolwich murder suspect Michael Adebolajo more than ten times to convince
him to work for the security services, it emerged yesterday.
Jeremiah Adebolajo said MI5 and MI6
‘harassed’ him and tried to press him for details about his family before
putting him on a ‘no-fly list’ when he refused.
The 26-year-old was first approached
in 2011 when he moved to Saudi Arabia to teach English at the University of
Ha’il, in NeJd.
He held 11 meetings with both MI5
and MI6, both in the Gulf and also in the UK, including on one occasion where
he was intercepted as he got off a flight at Heathrow.
As well as asking questions about
his brother Michael, 28, spies had also pressed him on his brother-in-law,
James Thompson, who had converted to Islam and married his sister.
They also asked him to identify
other men who had gone to the Yemen and may have been plotting to attack
Britain, but he said he didn’t know them.
Previously it had been alleged that
Jeremiah was paid thousands of pounds by MI6 as part of spying operations in
the Middle East, and was allowed to fly first-class and stay in five-star
hotels.
This was revealed in a document
allegedly written by Jeremiah’s sister, Blessing Adebolajo, 32, which was seen
earlier this month.
It was also alleged he was also
asked to help ‘turn’ his brother, Michael, to work for MI5, who were already
aware of Michael’s close links to extremist groups after he was arrested on his
way to Somalia to join terror group Al-Shabaab.
“That’s not true in any way. I mean
it’s completely false. I can understand what it’s based on, them approaching me
while I was in Saudi Arabia, but the claim I worked for them helped them or
co-operated with them in any way is false,’ Jeremiah Adebolajo told ITV News.
“I felt harassed. I felt there was
no choice but to meet them whenever they wanted to meet me to speak to them
whenever they wanted to speak to me…Their claim was that I had been in contact
with, spoken with, met in my time in England with people who they were interested
in.”
Government sources have already
confirmed that Michael Adebolajo was known to MI5. It was alleged that he
rebuffed efforts by the security service to recruit him as a spy.
Jeremiah may have been seen as the
ideal way to change his mind and said last night that they tried hard to
influence him.
“I would say that their approach
wasn’t so much aggressive as it was threatening. I mean there were implicit
threats made towards my welfare towards my time in Saudi Arabia, whether I
would be able to retain my job, um, so in short I’d say their approach was
worrying somewhat,’ he said.
Speaking about how often they met,
both in the UK and Saudi Arabia, he said: “I’d say they were about at the
beginning, they were you know, at least once a month and over the two years
they lessened somewhat, but they would be at unexpected times and I would say
once every two to three months, yeah.”
When asked about the execution of
Lee Rigby and the alleged link to his brother Michael and Michael Adebowale,
22, he said: “Legally I can’t speak about it.”
On June 5, Michael Adebolajo, 28, of
Romford, Essex, interrupted proceedings at the Old Bailey on several occasions
during a bail hearing, telling judge Mr Justice Sweeney via videolink: “It’s
not about you.”
Adebolajo, whose left arm was in a
plaster cast after allegedly murdering the soldier in Woolwich, south-east
London, on May 22, added: “This whole trial is about more than that. It’s not
about me.”
He went on: ‘Really and truly it’s
about the good, honest, decent, hardworking British members of society, whether
they be Muslim or non-Muslim. They are the ones that have suffered the most.’
Adebolajo added: ‘It’s possible
throughout life that people may sometimes smother you and say things about you
that are false. But as a regular citizen and human being, we have to get over
it.
“I believe that the British people
are decent. From my experience growing up in my country, only a fraction will
wish to slander and lie against me. But the rest would prefer to know the
truth.”
Adebolajo is also accused of the
attempted murder of two police officers and possession of a firearm – a 9.4mm
KNIL model 91 revolver – with intent to cause others to believe violence would
be used.
He was reprimanded by the judge for
interrupting several times and eventually the videolink was switched off. The
defendant was listed as Mujaahid Abu Hamza AKA Adebolajo by the court.
Adebolajo had asked to be referred
to by the name when he appeared before magistrates.
He was charged with the four counts,
after being discharged from hospital having spent just over a week there being
treated for his injuries after being shot by police.
The court heard Adebolajo had been
seen by psychiatrists three times while in hospital and at least twice since he
had been discharged and in custody, and had been declared fit for interview in
all.
While this was discussed the
defendant interjected with: “I’m not familiar with this legal jargon. I’m a
soldier, not a lawyer.”
The start of the hearing had been
delayed after Adebolajo complained about having to be handcuffed in the
video-link room at Belmarsh Prison.
He was eventually allowed to have
them removed on the understanding that two prison officers sat beside him
during the hearing.
Wearing a burgundy top with a pink
jumper that was only over one arm due to his cast, Adebolajo also complained
that his privacy had been violated.
He claimed he had been made to have
his genitals examined twice ahead of his appearance in court.
Describing the prison officer who
had asked to examine him as a ‘jobsworth’, he added that after the experience:
“I cried like a baby, you know, into my sleeve.”
He said he had let him look at him
as he had said ‘please’ when he asked, adding that he appreciated his politeness.
The packed courtroom listened as he
likened the situation to when someone says ‘please’ when they ask to get past
him when shopping for margarine in a supermarket.
“It could be Flora or Utterly
Butterly, you find it hard not to move, “he said.
When reprimanded by the judge for
interrupting, the defendant said: ‘Stop trying to stifle the truth. Wouldn’t
want the truth to get out, would we? Wouldn’t want that.”
But he later praised Mr Justice
Sweeney after he let him have his handcuffs removed, saying “May Allah bless
you’ three times. That man who is wearing the white wig and the red robe. May
Allah bless that man because he has had the courage to do something that many
wouldn’t have had the courage to do so.”
Adebolajo will appear at the court
alongside co-defendant Michael Adebowale, 22, of Greenwich, south-east London,
for a preliminary hearing on June 28.
Tags
Society
Violence does not pay.
ReplyDeleteHas the lives taken put a stop to this islamists madness?
Will it ever stop?
Will there ever be peace in the hearts of the extremist?
Will their eyes be whitened by peace or remain reddened by blood...innoSaint blood?
Will the battle be won or will they succeed in breeding a new breed of anti-islamists that will face them blood for blood?
Look at it my brother
We fight for God and call it Holy
What is holy about it
They only prove that Allah is not succeding in his bid to transform the world into a domain of peacful co-existence.
If what you believe in has failed why don't you try the one that teaches differently?
Na wa for una o