<http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=16661>
http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=16661 
 
2006-06-06
Britain's Muslims could take 'law into own hands'
Leader of Muslim Council warns trust could break down if British police fail
to explain Forest Gate raid. 
By Lachlan Carmichael - LONDON 
  _____  

The British police were under pressure Tuesday to clear up the confusion
over last week's massive anti-terror raid or risk seeing angry Muslims "take
the law into their own hands," a Muslim community leader warned. 


The Muslim Council of Britain's new leader Muhammed Abdul Bari said "trust
could break down" if the police failed to explain why they launched last
Friday's raid, which has turned up nothing of a reported chemical weapons
plot. 



Relaying the sentiment that he heard during a visit late Monday to the east
London neighborhood which was raided, Abdul Bari said "the message is the
confusion, it's the frustration and to some extent anger." 



Police arrested Mohammed Abdul Kahar, 23, and his brother Abul Koyair, 20,
during the raid on their home at dawn by 250 officers. Abdul Kahar, who was
shot and wounded, and Koyair have vehemently denied involvement in
terrorism. 



"People want to know what exactly happened and about the intelligence - is
it genuine information, is it flawed - these are the questions police have
to answer as soon as possible," Abdul Bari said. 



"Trust could break down if things are not clarified," said Abdul Bari, the
secretary general of Britain's largest Muslim organization. 



"Angry people can do anything, angry people can even feel that they should
take the law into their own hands, so anger has to be directed into positive
action," he warned. 



The Metropolitan Police's assistant commissioner Andy Hayman said police had
"no choice" but to launch the raid as they worried about public safety after
receiving specific intelligence of a terrorist plot. 



But Hayman, who declined to comment on reports by security sources that they
were looking for chemical or biological weapons, admitted that "we have not
found what we went in there to look for." 



He said that the police have removed documents and computers from the home
and that they were still conducting a live investigation. 



The admission by Hayman is fueling doubts about the London police. 



Police have already endured almost a year of harsh criticism, including
accusations of a cover-up, since armed officers shot dead an unarmed
Brazilian man on a subway train in the mistaken belief he was a suicide
bomber. 



The left-of-center newspaper, The Independent, said the high-profile swoop
had led to fears among local people about being branded extremists and many
Muslim families were now considering leaving Britain. 



The right-of-center daily, The Times, ran a letter from a Yusuf Patel who
said he lived in the Forest Gate area where the raid happened. 



"Most people I have spoken to believe that these raids are designed to
create fear within the Muslim community. If that is the case, it is
working," he said, warning of the risk of alienating local Muslims. 



The right-wing Daily Mail, meanwhile, said the "backlash" could play into
the hands of extremist groups keen to capitalize on the perception that the
Muslim community was being unfairly targeted in anti-terrorism operations. 



The raid is being investigated by watchdog the Independent Police Complaints
Commission (IPCC), which also conducted probes into the fatal shooting of
Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes. 



Sir Paul Lever, the former chairman of Britain's Joint Intelligence
Committee, which advises government on national security issues, said not
following up suspicions could be "potentially horrendous". 



 

 


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