The Mail on Sunday

Preachers of hate back on our streets

MI5 terror alert as f ive jihadi leaders linked to London Bridge attack are set to be let out of jail

- By Omar Wahid

POLICE and security chiefs fear the high command of an extremist group that inspired a generation of jihadis will soon be free again to preach hate on Britain’s streets.

Five senior figures in Al-Muhajiroun, whose f ormer members include London Bridge attacker Khuram Butt and Michael Adebolajo, one of Fusilier Lee Rigby’s killers, are expected to be released from prison by the end of the year.

Among them is Anjem Choudary, who is due for release in October having served less than half of a five- and- half- year sentence for inviting support for IS.

It is understood that Choudary, 51, will be kept under curfew in a taxpayer- funded safe house in North London and prevented from spouting extremist views. But astonishin­gly, no such restrictio­ns are in place for the others.

According to a source, MI5 and the police fear that, buoyed by the ‘street cred’ of serving prison terms, they will set up recruitmen­t stalls in areas such as London and Luton. There is concern that the Human Rights Act will prevent police from stepping in.

Up to 80 of the 193 people convi ct ed of t errorism off ences between 2007 and 2016 will be eligible for release this year – a situation described as a ‘concern’ by Home Office Minister Ben Wallace.

Choudary is suspected of inspiring at least 100 British jihadis and is denied access to fellow inmates by being kept in a ‘prison within a prison’ at HM Frankland in County Durham. Once released, it is understood he will be allowed to visit his family in Ilford, East London, during the day but must return to the safe house at night.

He will be under 24-hour surveillan­ce and prevented from preaching in person or on the internet.

But Choudary’s right-hand man, Mohammed Mizanur Rahman, 34, of Whitechape­l, East London, who was also convicted of inviting sup- port for IS and is likely to be released in October, faces fewer restrictio­ns. A source claimed Rahman, whose lectures included the condoning of the beheading of British aid worker Alan Henning by IS in Syria, will be able to meet fellow ALM members and preach in public.

It is understood the same freedom will be available to Moham- med Ishtiaq Alamgir, 38, the leader of ALM in Luton who is expected to complete his sentence in December for a terrorism offence, and Rajib Khan, 39, also from Luton, who was released earlier this month after completing a five-year jail term.

The o t h e r A L M me mb e r s expected to leave prison before the end of the year are Taha Hus-

Fears that Human Rights Act will let them speak

sain, 21, of Slough, Berkshire, and Mijanul Haque, 23, of Islington, North London.

Hussain was a friend of Butt and was filmed beside him in the Channel 4 documentar­y the Jihadis Next Door in 2016.

ALM recruitmen­t drives often involved setting up stalls in areas with large Muslim communitie­s. Once enlisted, recruits were taken to secret meetings where jihad was discussed openly. Scotland Yard said it could not comment on individual cases but ‘ police and the intelligen­ce community are working tirelessly and at pace to confront the terrorist threat’.

 ??  ?? JIHAD: Police hunt down terrorists, above, at London Bridge last year.
JIHAD: Police hunt down terrorists, above, at London Bridge last year.
 ??  ?? INSPIRATIO­N: Anjem Choudary was kept from fellow prisoners. Inset: Taha Hussain, second from right, with London Bridge killer Khuram Butt, second from left, in a TV documentar­y
INSPIRATIO­N: Anjem Choudary was kept from fellow prisoners. Inset: Taha Hussain, second from right, with London Bridge killer Khuram Butt, second from left, in a TV documentar­y
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