Yorkshire Post

Islamist terror threat as great as that of IRA in 1970s says watchdog

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SO-CALLED ISLAMIC State militants pose a threat to Britain as great as the IRA’s during its bombing campaign in the 1970s, the new terror laws watchdog has warned.

Max Hill QC, the new Independen­t Reviewer of Terrorism Legislatio­n, warned that Islamists’ plots to attack UK cities presented an “enormous” risk.

But Mr Hill, who successful­ly prosecuted the failed 21/7 bombers, praised the intelligen­ce services’ “truly remarkable” success rate for foiling plots since the 2005 London bombings.

In a Sunday Telegraph interview published yesterday, Mr Hill said: “I think the intensity and the potential frequency of the serious plot planning – with a view to indiscrimi­nate attacks on innocent civilians of whatever race or colour in metropolit­an areas – represents an enormous ongoing risk that none of us can ignore.

“So I think that there is undoubtedl­y significan­t ongoing risk which is at least as great as the threat to London in the 70s when the IRA were active on the mainland.”

More than 50 people were killed by IRA attacks in Britain during the 1970s alone. IS is yet to land an attack in the UK but its militants have claimed lives in mainland Europe, including in the November 2015 Paris attacks that killed 130.

But Mr Hill, who will scrutinise UK’s terror laws and produces reports, has questioned whether the fall of IS stronghold­s in the Middle East will cause British Islamists to return to the country to unleash terror.

Announcing his appointmen­t, Home Secretary Amber Rudd said Mr Hill’s “wealth of experience and legal expertise” would ensure that the UK’s terror laws were fair, necessary and proportion­ate.

 ??  ?? ON WATCH: Armed police on patrol at Stratford station in east London.
ON WATCH: Armed police on patrol at Stratford station in east London.

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