UK suicide bomber had ties to Al Muhajiroun - Police scrutinize extremist
Islamist websites July 14, 2005

Police scrutinize extremist Islamist websites 

Hugh Muir
Thursday July 14, 2005
The Guardian

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,1528058,00.html 

Detectives trying to gauge the scale and make-up of the network responsible
for last week's attacks will not be confining their investigations to
door-to-door inquiries on the streets of West Yorkshire. They will also be
probing a plethora of extreme Islamist websites which disseminate
anti-western and anti-Jewish views, and which frequently shower praise on
acts of terrorism.

Although police do not yet know exactly where those responsible gained the
expertise to make the bombs used last Thursday, they know there are any
number of websites that could have pointed them in the right direction and
put them in touch with similar-minded people.

Islamist groups often post instructions and videos on websites telling
sympathisers how to make bombs from everyday materials. They also provide
tips on which materials are hardest to detect and how to carry out a suicide
bombing.

Last December, a 26-minute video was posted in a militant Islamic chatroom
which showed how to construct a suicide bomb vest. It also gave details of
the device's effective range. 

Concern about such sites is not confined to the west. Earlier this year, the
Saudi Arabian authorities set up an online service to counsel young people
against joining al-Qaida. They also provided a hotline for families who fear
their sons are thinking of enlisting with terrorist groups. 

A campaign to force the main internet service providers to find and close
down such sites has been going on for some time. 

Beth Cox, head of counter terrorism at the Royal United Services Institute,
said: "Just as we use the internet to improve mainstream communications and
the performance of the economy, extremists use it to increase their
communications and knowledge. There is no real way to regulate it and I
can't see how there will be in the future." 

Among the sites causing concern is Jihadunspun (JUS), a highly professional
website which claims to present "a clear view of war on terror". It has been
widely criticised in the US by agencies including the state department. 

The site tells readers: "JUS translates al-Qaida statements daily in order
to bring readers the other side of the war of 'terror'." It questions claims
that al-Qaida was involved in the London bombing. 

"The previously unknown group circulated a claim of responsibility shortly
after this morning attacks, a copy of which was received by JUS," it says.
"However this statement has some glaring errors in it that indicated to us
that this material did not likely come from al-Qaida." 

Also causing concern are the internet publications of the Party for Islamic
Renewal. The site has uncritically published translated speeches by Osama
bin Laden's presumed deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, including one entitled "The
Freeing of Humanity and Homelands Under the Banner of the Qur'an." 

The al-Muhajiroun site has also been scrutinised. Its leader, Omar Muhammad
Bakri, has spoken of his ambition to see the "black flag of Islam" flying
over Downing Street. It is understood that at least one of the suspects
killed after the London blasts had links with members of al-Muhajiroun in
Bedfordshire. 

However, Massoud Shadjareh of the Islamic Human Rights Commission warned
against placing too much value on the role played by extremist websites. 

"There are a lot of websites I would like to see an end of, but we are a
free society and we need to be careful before we curtail freedom of speech."


He added: "I don't think websites are creating the problem. What is creating
the problem is the alienation of our youth [and] what is happening
internationally. We don't have any arenas in our mosques for them to discuss
these issues. We are pushing it underground." 









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