Sunday Mirror

Mum’s torment over the chirpy, sporty boy who became hate-filled killer

What lured him from the south to Birmingham?

- BY PHIL CARDY and AMARDEEP BASSEY

Adrian’s brother, Paul, is born followed in by second brother, Alexander

Adrian, now 19 years old, is convicted of criminal damage

He meets Jane Harvey at the Roebuck pub in Tunbridge Wells

Their daughter, Andi Jay Ajao, is born

Second daughter Teegan Adrienne is born after they move to the village of Northiam

Now once again calling himself Adrian Elms, he gets a two-year prison sentence for GBH

Freed, he moves to Eastbourne, but is sent back to jail for another stabbing

He marries Farzana Malik in Medway, Kent, but she later flees in fear

He’s said to have travelled to Saudia Arabia to ‘teach English’

Back in England, he moves to Crawley, West Sussex

After another Saudi Arabia stint, he’s back in UK

Now called Masood, he moves to Luton with partner Rohey Hydara. They have two children

They move to London and are said to have had two children

The family move into a flat in Stratford. His last address was in Birmingham Police at the flat on Hagley Road BIRMINGHAM was the final place Khalid Masood called home before unleashing his terror in Westminste­r.

Now investigat­ors are trying to piece together why the warped killer was drawn to live in Britain’s second city – dubbed the “jihadi finishing school” and “Terror Central of the West”.

Brum has been blighted by its links to Islamic extremism for years and police will be desperate to find out who Masood associated with there.

Before arriving in Birmingham he lived in southern areas with notorious terror links including East London, Luton and Crawley.

But he also spent time in the affluent towns of Rye, East Sussex, and Tunbridge Wells, Kent, some 200 miles away from the Midlands.

Now the reasons that made him move north will be central to the police investigat­ion.

Birmingham is a magnet for extremists who have been spreading messages of hate since the 1980s.

A seemingly impenetrab­le network of jihadis has flourished, holding undergroun­d meetings in backstreet mosques or nondescrip­t terraces in neglected inner-city areas.

MOTIVATION

Masood had been living with his daughter in a neat, modern red-brick semi in the Hockley area of the city.

Neighbours described him as a nice, pleasant man who said he was an English teacher.

Prior to launching the attack he is believed to have been holed up in a flat on Hagley Road, Edgbaston, a busy dual carriagewa­y lined with takeaways, cafes and shops.

Figures show the neighbouri­ng Sparkbrook area of the city was home to one in 10 convicted Islamic terrorists in the UK.

The area, which covers five mainly Muslim council wards, has produced 26 of the country’s 269 known jihadis.

Counter-terrorism officers say their investigat­ion into the attack will focus on Masood’s “motivation, preparatio­n and associates”.

They want to know if the killer, who had spent time in prison and worked in Saudi Arabia, was encouraged, supported or directed in the atrocity.

Violent extremists in Birmingham can be traced back as far as 1984, when Saudi dissident Mohammed Surur ended up there preaching a puritanica­l fundamenta­list version of Islam known as Salafism.

One former extremist said: “Muslims get drawn to the city after being radicalise­d in other parts of Britain or even other parts of the world.”

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