Sunderland Echo

Shopkeeper jailed for terror posts

ENCOURAGED TERRORISM THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA

- Copydesk.northeast@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @sunderland­echo

A Sunderland shopkeeper has been jailed for four-anda-half years for encouragin­g terrorism through his social media accounts.

Mohammed Khan, who ran an off-licence in Sunderland, supported Islamic State, spouted hatred and spread fear over his Twitter and Facebook pages.

Khan had promoted “lone wolf ” attacks against the west, encouraged martyrdom, praised extremists for deadly attacks on American soldiers and posed in front of an Islamic State flag for a profile picture.

The 40-year-old denied he deliberate­ly encouraged terrorist acts online, but a Judge at Newcastle Crown Court said it was clear he was a “supporter of so-called Islamic State” and had acted intentiona­lly to encourage the public to “commit, prepare or instigate” acts of terrorism.

Judge Paul Sloan QC told Khan: “It is clear from your tweets and retweets that you were a supporter of so called Islamic State, ISIS, Daesh but you also supported martyrdom.

“You had an uninhibite­d hatred for Shiite Muslims, president Asaad and his regime, non-believers and hatred for some western countries, such as the United States.”

The judge said Khan, who has served long prison sentences in the past for drug supply and robbery, believed Islamic State would stop genocide in Syria.

The court heard Khan, a sunni Muslim, who moved to Sunderland to get away from the ‘gang members and crime’ which were part of his lifestyle in Birmingham, said he would not be hated by Islamic State, regardless of his beliefs, and was not a supporter of them.

Khan, who has an earlier conviction from 2015 for a racially-aggravated public order offence as a result of earlier social media posts, told the court: “I have never believed in them, never supported them.

“I may have come across as inadverten­tly supporting them but it was not my sport, I’m not a pro-IS person.

“Given half the chance they will kill some non-Muslims.”

The court heard Khan, who has a teenage daughter, had boasted on social media about travelling to Syria to fight but told the court from the witness box that was “not true” and had been said purely to provoke reaction.

He said: “I didn’t go to Syria. I haven’t been to Syria.”

Khan, who served a fouryear prison sentence before his move to Sunderland in 2013, said he had wanted to go to Syria to help humanitari­an groups who provide aid but had been unable to as he was out on licence.

Khan told the court he has lost his shop as a result of his arrest last year, which he finds “painful” and said he had been accepted as part of the Sunderland community.

He said: “It was an excellent business, it really took off, I was the only one in the area.”

Khan said he initially had problems with ‘racism and discrimina­tion’ when he first took over the shop but had built up a good relationsh­ip with people living in the area.

The court heard Khan had shared a terrorist publicatio­n of an “ISIS call for attacks” on his Twitter account in December 2016.

On January 2 2017, Khan had posted “welcome to the year of fear”.

Khan pleaded guilty to five offences of encouragin­g terrorism, one of disseminat­ion of a terrorist publicatio­n and two of stirring up religious hatred.

Detective Superinten­dent Simon Atkinson, Head of Investigat­ions at CTP North East, said after the case: “Khan openly disseminat­ed material over the Internet that promoted terrorism and hatred of others.”

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Mohammed Khan

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