The Borneo Post

Anger mounts over known extremist

Authoritie­s had been notified after London attacker appeared on Jihadist TV documentar­y

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LONDON: Anger mounted in Britain yesterday over how one of the London attackers slipped through the surveillan­ce net as Prime Minister Theresa May came under pressure two days before an election.

Flags at half- mast, Britain was to fall silent at 11.00am (1000 GMT) to remember the seven killed and dozens injured on Saturday night, a mourning ritual now grimly familiar after two previous terror attacks in less than three months.

Police said they carried out a fresh raid in east London overnight hours after naming two of the assailants – Khuram Shazad Butt, 27, a Pakistan-born Briton, and Rachid Redouane, 30, who described himself as a Moroccan-Libyan dual national.

The third assailant has been named as Youssef Zaghba, a 22-year- old Italian national of Moroccan descent who was from east London.

Police said Zaghba had not been a subject of interest to police or the domestic spy agency MI5.

Twelve people arrested as part of the investigat­ion have since been released without charge.

The Metropolit­an Police said Butt “was known to the police and MI5” but there was no intelligen­ce to suggest the attack was being planned.

Criticism immediatel­y flared about how Butt was able to carry out the attack, as he had featured in a Channel 4 TV documentar­y entitled ‘ The Jihadis Next Door’ and, according to the British media, numerous people alarmed by his views had gone to the authoritie­s.

The London attack follows the May 22 suicide bombing at the Manchester Arena by Salman Abedi – killing 22 people including children – who was also known to British intelligen­ce services.

“Why didn’t they stop TV jihadi?” read The Sun front page, while The Daily Mirror asked: “So how the hell did he slip through?”

The conservati­ve Daily Telegraph commented: “While we pride ourselves on being an open and tolerant society, it is astonishin­g that people who pose such a danger to life and limb should be able to parade their foul ideology on TV with no consequenc­es.”

“There were some red lights flashing, certainly in the case of Mr Butt,” said Michael Clarke, analyst at the RUSI defence and security think-tank.

“Certainly with Abedi in Manchester and Butt now, it looks as if there were some indication­s that on the face of it may have been missed and I think that will be a great concern,” he told the BBC.

Prime Minister Theresa May faced mounting criticism for her record on security in the six years she served as Britain’s interior minister before becoming prime minister last year.

Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn, when asked by ITV

While we pride ourselves on being an open and tolerant society, it is astonishin­g that people who pose such a danger to life and limb should be able to parade their foul ideology on TV with no consequenc­es. Michael Clarke, analyst at RUSI defence and security think-tank.

television if he backed calls for May to resign, said: “Indeed I would.”

Between 2009 and 2016, the number of police officers fell by almost 20,000, or around 14 percent, according to the independen­t Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank.

“What they miss, in cutting numbers of police on the beat, as it were, is that community intelligen­ce,” analyst Clarke told the BBC.

Corbyn has pledged to hire thousands of officers for neighbourh­ood duties, arguing that a grassroots approach would curb crime and radicalisa­tion.

Saturday’s attack saw three men, wearing fake suicide vests, mow down pedestrian­s on London Bridge, before slashing and stabbing revellers in Borough Market, a haunt for late- night bars and restaurant­s.

A Canadian and a Frenchman were among the dead and citizens of several nations were among the 48 injured, including Australia, Bulgaria, France, Greece and New Zealand.

Eighteen of the injured are still in critical condition, according to health authoritie­s. — AFP

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 ??  ?? A man stands near flowers layed at Potters Fields Park in London, after a vigil to commemorat­e the victims of the terror attack on London Bridge and at Borough Market that killed seven people. — AFP photo
A man stands near flowers layed at Potters Fields Park in London, after a vigil to commemorat­e the victims of the terror attack on London Bridge and at Borough Market that killed seven people. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Khuram Shazad Butt (left) and Rachid Redouane. — Reuters photo
Khuram Shazad Butt (left) and Rachid Redouane. — Reuters photo

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