The Independent

Police miss Parsons Green bomber’s Isis inspiratio­n

- LIZZIE DEARDEN HOME AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

Police botched their investigat­ion into Isis propaganda that inspired the Parsons Green attacker and failed to link him to the terrorist group, The Independen­t can reveal.

Ahmed Hassan, an 18-year-old Iraqi asylum seeker, is facing life imprisonme­nt for attempting to bomb a District Line train in London.

Isis claimed responsibi­lity for the blast within hours but the Old Bailey was not presented with any proof that Hassan communicat­ed with militants or supported their cause.

“There is nothing to suggest he was inspired by Daesh [Isis],” the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS) told The Independen­t.

Our investigat­ions show that police found evidence of Hassan’s affiliatio­n with the terrorist group, but misinterpr­eted the material and sent flawed informatio­n to prosecutor­s.

The blunder could affect the jail term handed to the bomber on Friday and The Independen­t has submitted urgent evidence to the Old Bailey ahead of the hearing.

Justice Haddon-Cave will have the power to increase Hassan's jail term under terrorism laws, and any link to Isis could mean harsher punishment.

The teenager destroyed his mobile phone and wiped a laptop given to him for college work, hampering the investigat­ion into what drove him to launch the attack on 15 September.

But police searching his foster home in Surrey found a memory stick containing Arabic nasheeds – Islamic songs. Officers translated the audio files and provided English transcript­s showing how they encouraged violence in support of the “state of Islam” against the “coalition of falsehood”, but failed to identify the songs as Isis propaganda.

Two nasheeds The Independen­t were given details of were released by the terrorist group’s dedicated propaganda wing for songs.

One is among the group’s most well-known nasheeds and remains available on YouTube and other websites at the time of writing, calling for global terror attacks.

It may be the song Hassan was seen listening to by a Barnardo’s charity worker, which was supporting him as a child asylum seeker at the time.

The member of staff, who spoke Arabic, said the teenager was listening to a song on his phone including matching lyrics threatenin­g “slaughter”.

The second nasheed examined by The Independen­t was also released by one of Isis’ official propaganda wings and calls for disbelieve­rs to be “destroyed” in graphic terms.

Charlie Winter, a senior research fellow at the Internatio­nal Centre for the Study of Radicalisa­tion and Political Violence (ICSR) at King's College London, said he was “surprised and a little troubled” that specialist counter-terror police failed to identify the material.

“It seems they’ve dropped the ball on these nasheeds and this is problemati­c because it’s symptomati­c of a broader unawarenes­s of what nasheeds are, what they do and the fact they are produced in-house by Isis,” he added.

“There’s little question that it’s Isis propaganda, and it’s the stuff you wouldn’t really know about unless you’re thinking deeply about the group and its aims.”

Mr Winter said the two songs in question were specifical­ly released to incite violence and one was featured in a mass beheading video.

“Nasheeds are an important part of the fabric of Isis’ political culture,” he explained. “They are enormously symbolic and among the most recognisab­le outputs of its propaganda over the past few years.”

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi, a research fellow at the Middle East Forum, told The Independen­t that translatio­ns presented to court were also inaccurate.

“It’s pretty hard to claim Hassan was not inspired by Isis if he was listening to these nasheeds,” he added.

The songs are not the only evidence of Hassan’s support for Isis – a teacher saw him watching a video featuring the black Isis flag and another boy taken in by his foster parents described him as “brainwashe­d” and “mad”.

He was reported to the Government’s Prevent counter-extremism programme on at least two occasions and authoritie­s are investigat­ing how he was still able to launch the attack.

Police said the “devious” teenager appeared to engage with the project while secretly plotting the terror attack.

Hassan had been flagged as a potential risk just days after being interviewe­d by social services in January 2016, three months after he arrived in Britain in the back of a lorry from Calais.

Then 16, he told immigratio­n officials he was being forced to become an Isis child soldier in Iraq and had been “trained to kill” by the terrorist group.

But while giving evidence to the Old Bailey, Hassan said he actually had had no contact with Isis and lied because he wanted to claim asylum. Much of the teenager’s life remains a mystery – to police as well as his classmates, teachers and foster parents.

The couple described Hassan as agitated in the weeks leading up to the bombing, taking phone calls out of

 ??  ?? A version of one of the Isis nasheeds that inspired the Parsons Green attacker remained on YouTube with more than 30,000 views at the time of writing (YouTube)
A version of one of the Isis nasheeds that inspired the Parsons Green attacker remained on YouTube with more than 30,000 views at the time of writing (YouTube)
 ??  ?? Ahmed Hassan, the 18-year-old Iraqi asylum seeker convicted of launching the Parsons Green attack (Photos Metropolit­an Police)
Ahmed Hassan, the 18-year-old Iraqi asylum seeker convicted of launching the Parsons Green attack (Photos Metropolit­an Police)
 ??  ?? Ahmed Hassan caught on CCTV while fleeing London after the Parsons Green bombing on 15 September
Ahmed Hassan caught on CCTV while fleeing London after the Parsons Green bombing on 15 September

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