The Asian Age

London attacker wasn’t seen as a threat by MI5

More ‘significan­t arrests’ made: UK police

- MICHAEL HOLDEN

Before he killed at least four people in Britain’s deadliest attack since the 2005 London bombings, Khalid Masood was considered by intelligen­ce officers to be a criminal who posed little serious threat.

A British-born convert to Islam, Masood had shown up on the periphery of previous terrorism investigat­ions that brought him to the attention of Britain’s MI5 counter-intelligen­ce agency. But the 52-yearold was not under investigat­ion when he sped across Westminste­r Bridge on Wednesday, ploughing down pedestrian­s with a hired car before running into the parliament­ary grounds and fatally stabbing an unarmed policeman. He was shot dead by the police.

In London, the police said on Friday that two more “significan­t” arrests had been made on the brazen terror attack, as investigat­ors focused on how the lone perpetrato­r was radicalise­d and appealed for informatio­n about the killer. The Metropolit­an Police’s acting deputy commission­er and counter-terrorism head Mark Rowley said two more “significan­t arrests” were made, with a total of nine persons in custody. One woman has been released on bail.

He also appealed to the public to come forward with any informatio­n on 52-year-old Khalid Masood, who was born as Adrian Russell Ajao in Dartford before converting to Islam. He is said to have used a number of aliases, including Adrian Elms.

While some of those he was involved with included people suspected of being keen to travel to join jihadi groups overseas, Masood “himself never did so”, said a US government source who sought anonymity.

Scotland Yard’s Mark Rowley told reporters: “Our investigat­ion focuses on understand­ing his motivation, his operation and his associates.” He added: “Whilst there is still no evidence of further threats, you’ll understand our determinat­ion is to find out if either he acted totally alone, inspired perhaps by terrorist propaganda, or if others have encouraged, supported or directed him.”

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for Masood’s attack, but it was unclear what links — if any — he had with the terror group. The police said there was no prior intelligen­ce about his intent to mount an attack.

“An act of terrorism tried to silence our democracy,” Prime Minister Theresa May told Parliament. “He took out his rage indiscrimi­nately.”

Born Adrian Russell Ajao in Kent, to the southeast of

London, on Christmas Day in 1964, he moved though several addresses in England, although he was known to have lived recently in Birmingham in central England.

The Daily Mail newspaper said he was brought up by his single mother in the town of Rye on England’s south coast, later converting to Islam and changing his name. Other media reports said he was a married father of three and a former English teacher who was into bodybuildi­ng.

One soccer team photograph of Masood, taken at school in southern England, showed the future attacker smiling.

Little detail has been given by the British police about the man and what might have led him to carry out Wednesday’s attack, the deadliest in Britain since the London suicide bombings of 2005 by four young British Islamists, which killed 52.

Known by a number of aliases, he racked up a string of conviction­s, but none for terrorism-related offences. His occupation was unclear.

It was as long ago as November 1983 that he first came

to the attention of the authoritie­s when he was found guilty of causing criminal damage. His last conviction came 14 years ago in December 2003 for possession of a knife.

He may have taught in Saudi Arabia for four years from 2005 but there was no confirmati­on. “Our working assumption is that he was inspired by internatio­nal terrorism,” said Mr Rowley.

But Masood’s age doesn’t fit the profile of militant attackers, who are typically younger than 30, according to counter-terrorism officers.

Mr Rowley said detectives were questionin­g nine people in custody, having made two further “significan­t” arrests in central and northwest England.

Iwona Romek, a former neighbour from Birmingham, told reporters: “When I saw the pictures on TV and in the papers of the man who carried out the attack, I recognised him as the man who used to live next door... He had a young child, who I’d think was about five or six years old. There was a woman living there with him, an Asian woman. He seemed to be quite nice, he would be taking care of his garden and the weeds.” In December, she said, he suddenly moved out.

Birmingham has been one of the hotbeds for British Islamists. According to a study by the Henry Jackson think tank earlier this month, 39 of 269 people convicted in Britain of terrorism offences from 1998 to 2015 came from the city. Among those plots was one to kidnap and behead a British soldier. In December, two men were found guilty of planning to give £3,000 to Brussels bombing suspect Mohamed Abrini — widely known as “the man in the hat”.

There are over 213,000 Muslims in Birmingham, making up over a fifth of the population, according to the 2011 census, and there has been growing concern about divisions in the diverse city.

The car Masood used in Wednesday’s attack had been hired in Birmingham from rental firm Enterprise, suggesting he still had connection­s to the area. Since the attack, the police raided a number of addresses across the city, arresting five men and two women on suspicion of preparing terrorist acts.

Masood may have rented an apartment close to the Edgbaston area of the city, not far from the Enterprise offices, and that was one of the properties raided by armed officers. On the eve of the attack that Ms May cast as an assault on democracy, Masood spent his last night in a budget hotel in Brighton on the south coast, where he ate a takeaway kebab, the Sun newspaper said. Michael Petersen, a guest who saw him at the hotel reception, said Masood appeared polite and had done nothing to arouse suspicion.

“Nothing in his demeanour or his looks would have given me any thoughts that would make me think he was anything but normal,” he said.

 ?? — AP ?? People stand in front of floral tributes to victims of Wednesday’s attack outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Friday.
— AP People stand in front of floral tributes to victims of Wednesday’s attack outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Friday.

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