Ottawa Citizen

Terror charge a political plot, radical cleric claims

- TOM WHITEHEAD

LONDON Radical preacher Anjem Choudary launched a 20-minute court monologue protesting his innocence after being charged with a terror offence for the first time.

The controvers­ial cleric said that he would be pleading that Prime Minister David Cameron, the police and the Crown Prosecutio­n Service were the guilty ones after being accused of inviting support for the terror group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant between June 29, 2014, and March 6 this year.

The 48-year-old claimed his arrest and charge was a “political manoeuvre to silence Muslim voices” and insisted that he would defend himself in court.

Choudary appeared at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court along with co-accused, Mohammed Mizanur Rahman, 32. The pair allegedly encouraged Muslims to obey ISIL as a caliphate in online messages, despite it being a banned terrorist organizati­on.

It is believed to be the first time Choudary has been charged with a terrorism offence.

Asked how he intended to plead, the former lawyer said: “I will be pleading Cameron, police and the judges are guilty and the only people who are innocent here are me and Mr. Rahman.”

He said: “I believe from the top down this is a political manoeuvre from Cameron, the Home Secretary, the police and the CPS, to try to silence voices of the Muslim community, of which I am one of the loudest. I have a very strong case against the Crown and I would like to have my day in court.”

Choudary and Rahman were arrested, along with seven other men, in September 2014 on suspicion of being members of a proscribed organizati­on, and have been on police bail since.

At the Westminste­r court, Choudary said he had openly said he wanted to live under Shariah law and had described what a caliphate was, but that that was a “world of difference” from saying to people they should go.

Prosecutor David Cawthorne said of the defendants: “Both are high-profile figures and are well aware of their influence across social media and their wider community.”

Chief magistrate Howard Riddle praised Choudary’s representa­tions but refused him bail. Both defendants were remanded in custody and will appear at the Old Bailey on Aug. 28.

Prior to being charged, Choudary had said: “The whole issue is about people supposedly preaching hate, but there’s so much hate preached by people, by the far-right, by animal rights activists. If people have strong views, why should they be curtailed?”

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Anjem Choudary

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