Birmingham Post

Sledgehamm­er vandal jailed for mosque attacks

- Matthew Cooper News Reporter

AVANDAL who launched a religiousl­y-aggravated wrecking spree on five Birmingham mosques – smashing windows and doors after arming himself with a sledgehamm­er – has been jailed for three years and nine months.

Arman Rezazadeh, a Muslim of Iranian descent, sparked a major hate crime inquiry supported by anti-terror police on March 21 by causing at least £11,500 worth of damage to the mosques.

Rezazadeh, 34, of Greenhill Road, Handsworth, pleaded guilty last month to five counts of religiousl­y aggravated criminal damage.

He was jailed at the city’s crown court where Judge Michael Chambers QC said the offences had prompted “horror and terror”, and had offended against Birmingham’s history of religious tolerance.

Rezazadeh, who has a history of mental health problems linked to use of cannabis, handed himself in at West Midlands Police headquarte­rs a day after the attacks.

Prosecutor Tom Walkling said Rezazadeh, who had been drinking alcohol to celebrate the Iranian new year on the eve of the attacks, struck at five places of worship, initially using a sledgehamm­er and then a golf club.

Mr Walkling told the court the offences happened between 1.25am and 3.12am, adding: “For reasons that are obvious, the Muslim community in Birmingham and across the country was put in considerab­le fear.”

After Rezazadeh had handed himself in and confessed to being behind the attacks, it became clear that he had serious mental health issues and he was not arrested, instead being committed to the care of a hospital.

While at the hospital, Rezazadeh denied being responsibl­e for the damage, despite CCTV, DNA and mobile phone cell-site evidence linking him to the offences. It also emerged in court that he had told an interviewe­r while being treated as an in-patient in April that he thought there may be a religious significan­ce to the number of windows that had been broken.

As well as denying that the man caught on CCTV looked like him, Rezazadeh said he had only confessed to get an opportunit­y to “expose” false religious teachings.

Judge Chambers told Rezazadeh: “Birmingham has a long history of religious toleration and harmony, not only between the faiths but within the faiths as well.

“You quite deliberate­ly and seriously offended against that.”

The judge, who said the defendant’s mental health problems were self-induced by cannabis use, added: “You were motivated by your religious hatred, you being of the Shia faith and the mosques being Sunni Muslim mosques.

“The harm in this case has been extremely substantia­l – the impact on the local and wider Muslim community has been huge.

“Clearly this offending was planned and premeditat­ed. You selected your targets, you went out in dark, disguised clothing, and you went armed with a sledgehamm­er and another weapon.

“This is on any view a religious hate crime. It’s not suggested otherwise, nor could it realistica­lly be so.”

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 ??  ?? > Arman Rezazadeh who damaged five mosques and, below, repairs get under way at Jam-E-Masjid Qiblah Hadhrat Sahib Gulhar Shareef Birmingham in Erdington
> Arman Rezazadeh who damaged five mosques and, below, repairs get under way at Jam-E-Masjid Qiblah Hadhrat Sahib Gulhar Shareef Birmingham in Erdington

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