Regina Leader-Post

Imam shielded alleged attacker from angry mob

AN ANGRY CROWD BEGAN KICKING AND PUNCHING DARREN OSBORNE UNTIL MOSQUE OFFICIALS STEPPED IN TO PROTECT HIM

- MARTIN EVANS, ANITA SINGH AND LINDSEY TELFORD

LONDON • It was shortly after midnight when the group of worshipper­s finished their nightly Taraweeh prayers at the Muslim Welfare House mosque in north London’s Finsbury Park.

Despite the late hour, the balmy temperatur­es meant nobody was in a hurry to get home, and friends, many wearing traditiona­l white Ramadan gowns, stood around chatting.

Eventually a small group of men said goodnight and moved off along the still busy Seven Sisters Road towards their homes on the nearby Andover Estate.

But after a short distance 52-yearold Markran Ali, who had earlier complained of feeling unwell, collapsed to the ground clutching his chest.

As his companions gathered round to tend to him, they were targeted in what has now been acknowledg­ed to be Britain’s latest terrorist attack.

A 3.5-ton Luton van, which had been travelling east along Seven Sisters Road veered across the carriagewa­y and ploughed at high speed into the group at 12.20 a.m.

Ali was pronounced dead at the scene over half an hour later, while at least

eight others were seriously injured, with some lodged under the vehicle’s wheels.

Hearing the screams of those trapped, fellow worshipper­s raced to the scene and while some sought to help the wounded, others, realizing what they had just witnessed, hauled the van driver from the cab.

According to those on the scene, 47-year-old Darren Osborne, who was behind the wheel, calmly told the group: “I’m going to kill Muslims ... you deserve it ... I did my bit.”

Earlier on Sunday, the suspect had travelled from his home on the outskirts of Cardiff to one of the only rental car companies in the area open on a Sunday and rented the Luton van.

Osborne then allegedly set off to drive the 160 miles to the area of north London that is home to the once infamous Finsbury Park mosque.

In the early 2000s, the area became synonymous with radical Islam when the mosque had been the base of hate preacher Abu Hamza.

But after being shut down in 2003 by the police, the centre was reopened two years later, with a new board of trustees. Since then the mosque has been at the centre of efforts to integrate with the wider community and often holds open days for people of all faiths.

However, the place of worship has never shed its former reputation and in recent years it has been the target of several attacks, including an attempted firebombin­g.

Whether the suspect’s intended target was the mosque is not yet known and will form part of the police investigat­ion.

But in the event those injured had not been at the mosque but at the Muslim Welfare House, a sister mosque just yards away on Seven Sisters Road.

After being dragged from his cab, Osborne also allegedly told the group: “Kill me.”

But for the extraordin­ary actions of the Mosque’s Imam, Mohammed Mahmoud, he may have got his wish.

As the angry crowd began raining blows on him, kicking and punching him as he lay on the ground, Mahmoud and other officials from the mosque stepped in to protect him.

The 30-year-old imam yelled at the shocked and angry crowd: “Don’t hit him. You do not touch him. Hand him over to the police.”

Speaking at the scene yesterday, Mahmoud urged people to show restraint in the wake of the attack, even calling for forgivenes­s.

Describing how he saved the assailant’s life, he said: “We found a group of people quickly started to collect around the assailant. Some tried to hit and punch and kick him.

“By God’s grace we managed to surround him and to protect him from any harm. We stopped all forms of attack and abuse towards him that were coming from every angle.”

Bystanders flagged down a passing police van, which immediatel­y called in counter-terrorism support.

Cellphone footage show Mahmoud shouting at the mob to “stay back” and shielding Osborne with his body as police officers loaded him into the back of a van.

As he was being handcuffed, he grinned at the crowd and blew them kisses. He was taken to hospital for a mental health assessment.

Hours later the Metropolit­an Police issued a statement confirming that the suspect had been arrested for the commission, preparatio­n or instigatio­n of terrorism including murder and attempted murder.

Members of the local Jewish and Christian faiths were quickly on the scene to offer their support and show their solidarity.

As the area woke up to news of the attack locals came to place flowers at the scene.

As the day drew on, business secretary Sajid Javid attended the scene, followed a short while later by Prime Minister Theresa May, who despite expressing her disgust at the attack was heckled by sections of the crowd.

DON’T HIT HIM. YOU DO NOT TOUCH HIM. HAND HIM OVER TO THE POLICE.

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