Terror camp fears over school years ago
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/09/04/nterror04.xm
l
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/09/04/nterror04.x
ml&DCMP=EMC-new_04092006> &DCMP=EMC-new_04092006
By David Sapsted
(Filed: 04/09/2006)
 

A Muslim school in the Sussex countryside being searched by more than 100
police officers was first reported to the Government as being a suspected
training camp for terrorists more than seven years ago.
Police descended on Jameah Islamiyah at Mark Cross over the weekend and
their searches are expected to last days, if not weeks.
Although there is no suggestion that either the owner or his staff knew of
any illegal activities going on at the 54-acre site surrounding the
dilapidated, former convent, it emerged yesterday that the Yemeni ambassador
to London warned the Government in January 1999, that the site was being
used to train young Islamic extremists.
The warning came after a group of British Muslims was arrested in Aden over
an alleged bomb plot. Robin Cook, then foreign secretary, told the Commons:
"There have been investigations into the matter. The training provided
purports to be survival training and also martial arts. We have not
established that there was any breach of British law during such training."
At the time, Sussex police said that the reports of the school grounds being
used as a terrorist training camp appeared "totally unsubstantiated".
It is known that in the late 1990s Abu Hamza, the jailed cleric, held a camp
at the school, a charitable institution that currently has only 12 students,
aged 11 to 16, in a complex of buildings with almost 100 rooms.
Bilal Patel, who bought the site in 1993 for £800,000 when it was being run
as a ballet school, said that he had asked Hamza and his 15 or so followers
to leave because their behaviour was "strange". He said that he had received
a letter from Hamza which he had handed over to the police because he "did
not like" the contents.
"When Hamza arrived we were immediately concerned about his strange
behaviour," said Mr Patel, a former imam in south London.
"He and his followers set up camp in the grounds and kept themselves to
themselves. We had to tell Abu Hamza that we did not want him to come back
again because he was so strange."
According to Sky News yesterday, there were also reports that some of those
being held at Guantanamo Bay had receiving training at a camp in the
woodland surrounding the school.
Clearly, though, police did not believe they were at any risk when they
moved on to the site early on Saturday morning: none was armed and officers
conducted their searches in normal uniforms, rather than protective suits.
"We are interested in the people who have visited here," one officer said
yesterday. "There has been a lot of speculation about training camps. The
radicalisation of would-be recruits is very important to us."
The school offers itself as a retreat for Muslim families and groups, as a
training base for Islamic teachers and as a site for camps for Islamic
groups.
Parties were frequently seen arriving at the school in coaches from London
or by mini-bus from Tunbridge Wells station.
The school received a critical report from Ofsted inspectors just before
Christmas. It was criticised for a lack of involvement with the local
community or nearby schools, failures in general education and the poor
fabric of the buildings.
  _____  

Homes searched after restaurant arrests
(Filed: 04/09/2006)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=NXAVXFDN1CAQ5QFIQMGSFF
OAVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2006/09/04/nterror104.xml

Police were yesterday searching a number of addresses across London in
connection with arrests made at a Chinese restaurant.
Among those questioned is thought to be Abu Abdullah, 42, the adopted name
of a man who leads the group once headed by Abu Hamza. Police arrested eight
men at the Bridge to China Town restaurant in Borough, central London, which
serves Halal Chinese food. Another four were held near the restaurant,
including Abdullah, and two at their homes, bringing the total to 14.
The men were being questioned on suspicion of the commission, preparation or
instigation of acts of terrorism.
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