Ottawa Citizen

Bomber may have trained on gov’t dime

Plot funded by student loan, U.K. cops believe

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The Manchester suicide bomber used taxpayer-funded student loans and benefits to bankroll the terror plot, police believe.

Salman Abedi is believed to have received thousands in state funding in the runup to Monday’s atrocity, even while he was overseas receiving bomb-making training. Police are investigat­ing Abedi’s finances, including how he paid for frequent trips to Libya — where he is thought to have been taught to make bombs.

It comes as Assistant Commission­er Mark Rowley, Britain’s most senior counter-terrorism officer, said they had made “immense progress” in dismantlin­g Abedi’s terror network.

Abedi’s finances are a major “theme” of the police inquiry amid growing alarm over the ease with which jihadists are able to manipulate Britain’s welfare and student loans system to secure financing. One former detective said jihadists were enrolling on university courses to collect the student loans “often with no intention of turning up.”

Abedi was given at least £7,000 from the taxpayerfu­nded Student Loans Company after beginning a business administra­tion degree at Salford University in October 2015.

It is thought he received a further $12,000 in the 2016 academic year even though he had already dropped out of the course. Salford University declined to say if it had informed the Student Loans Company that Abedi’s funding should have ended.

The Department for Work and Pensions refused to say if Abedi had received any benefits, including housing benefit and income support.

Abedi, 22, never held down a job, according to neighbours and friends, but was able to travel regularly between the UK and Libya.

He also had sufficient funds to buy materials for his sophistica­ted bomb while living in a rented house in south Manchester and then rented two more properties before the attack.

David Videcette, a former Metropolit­an police detective who worked on the 7/7 London bombing investigat­ion, said of the student loan system: “It is an easy way for a terrorist to move forward and finance their activities at the expense of the taxpayer. All you have got to do is get yourself into university and then off you go. Often they have no intention of turning up.”

Prof. Anthony Glees, director of Buckingham University’s Centre for Security and Intelligen­ce Studies, said: “The British system makes funds readily available to jihadist students without checks on them. There needs to be an inquiry.”

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