Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Woman jailed for minimum 14 years for planning terror attack at St Paul’s

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A WEST London mum who was on course to become the UK’s first female homegrown suicide bomber planned on detonating a suicide vest on a Tube train, as part of her plot to attack St Paul’s Cathedral.

Safiyya Shaikh has been jailed for a minimum of 14 years for plotting the horrifying terrorist attack on the London landmark.

It was revealed for the first time at her sentencing hearing, at the Old Bailey on Friday July, 3 that as part of her plot to bomb the famous cathedral, Shaikh was also planning on wearing a suicide vest and detonating it on a London Undergroun­d train moments later.

Shaikh, from Hayes, extensivel­y researched how to cause maximum carnage at the visitor attraction and place of worship, saying she wanted “a lot to die” before being killed herself so she could reach paradise.

Her murderous plans came to light when she sought help from a bomb-making expert who she believed to be a willing co-conspirato­r, when it was in fact an undercover officer.

She admitted charges of preparing terrorist acts and disseminat­ion of terrorist publicatio­ns on the internet.

Shaikh’s defence team said she had “doubts” over the plot, but moments before the judge was due to sentence her on Thursday July 2 prosecutor­s disclosed details of a phone call to a friend from prison last week in which Shaikh said: “I didn’t get cold feet, yeah – I was ready to go through with it.”

Sentencing Shaikh to life with a minimum term of 14 years at the Old Bailey on Friday, Mr Justice Sweeney said: “I had already reached the sure conclusion in the original evidence that your claim of doubt to the police and others was a lie.

“Your intention had been – and remained throughout – strong.”

Shaikh, who sat in the dock wearing a black hijab with her head bowed, showed little emotion as the sentence was read out.

She smiled and raised her index finger, widely recognised as an Islamic State salute, to members of the press as she was led from court after sentencing.

Police said heroin user Shaikh had never expressed regret or remorse for her actions and had planned to leave a bomb at the London landmark before detonating her suicide vest on a Tube train moments later. She also developed a reputation for her extremist propaganda posts online.

Commander Richard Smith, head of the Metropolit­an Police’s Counter Terrorism Command, said: “She loved watching graphic videos of terrorist killings and her mission ... was to inspire others to fight, even after she hoped to have died in a suicide attack.

“She was so serious about her propaganda work, she wanted to ensure it would continue even after she had died.”

The court heard Shaikh, born Michelle Ramsden, suffered a “truly traumatic childhood”, and had her daughter at a young age.

She converted to Islam in 2007 when she was impressed by the kindness of a local Muslim family, but her view of Islam became increasing­ly extremist and she stopped attending mosques.

She was also engaged on the government’s anti-radicalisa­tion strategy Prevent.

However, by the time she began researchin­g her bloody project in 2019 she had already cultivated a reasonable following online among those who shared her ideologies, but Shaikh had no expertise in bomb-making, so struck up a friendship with a man who could help, unaware he was a police officer.

Shaikh agreed to meet up with her fixer’s wife, unaware she was also an undercover officer, during which she wept as she discussed her life and said she wanted forgivenes­s from Allah for “everything in my life that I’ve done”.

Police stormed Shaikh’s home the following month after she cancelled plans to meet up with the fixer’s wife to discuss how the plot would work.

Shaikh later became distressed when she was told the “brother” who agreed to help her was in fact working for the police.

Prosecutor Alison Morgan QC, opening the sentencing hearing last month, said: “She engaged with others, who she believed to be of a similar mindset, to instigate and plan a terrorist attack involving the use of improvised explosives to attack St Paul’s Cathedral and a hotel nearby.

“In furtheranc­e of her attack plan, she visited the cathedral to assess its security arrangemen­t and the best place to detonate a bomb. She stated that her intention was to kill herself and as many other people as possible.”

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