Cyprus Today

Driver who targeted London mosque was angered by Islamist attacks

-

A MAN who drove a van into Muslim worshipper­s outside a mosque last June was motivated by deadly Islamist attacks in Britain and an obsession with a television account of Muslim men who targeted white girls, a London court heard on Monday.

Darren Osborne, 48, also lambasted politician­s, calling London Mayor Sadiq Khan a disgrace and Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn a “terrorist sympathise­r”, prosecutor Jonathan Rees said, quoting from a note he said Osborne left in the van.

The note described Muslim men as rapists, “feral” and “in-bred” and when he was detained after the attack, Osborne said: “At least I had a go”, Mr Rees told Woolwich Crown Court.

Osborne is accused of murdering Makram Ali, 51, a father of six who came to Britain from Bangladesh aged 10, and the attempted murder of other worshipper­s as they left a mosque in Finsbury Park after latenight Ramadan prayers.

Osborne has denied the accusation­s.

“The evidence establishe­s that the defendant was trying to kill as many of the group as possible,” Mr Rees told jurors.

“The prosecutio­n say that the note and the comments he made after his detention establish that this act of extreme violence was, indeed, an act of terrorism, designed to influence government and intimidate the Muslim community.”

The incident occurred just weeks after three Islamists drove a van into pedestrian­s on London Bridge before going on a knife rampage, killing eight.

Mr Rees said Osborne hired a van and drove to London from his home in Cardiff. After a plan to attack an anti-Israel march failed, Osborne drove around seeking alternativ­e targets.

He is accused of ramming the crowd at Finsbury Park as worshipper­s helped Mr Ali who had earlier become unwell.

The court was told Osborne, who had never previously openly expressed racist opinions, had become obsessed with Muslims in the weeks before the attack after watching a BBC television drama Three Girls, based on true stories of victims of child sex gangs comprised mainly of British Pakistani men. Mr Rees said Osborne searched online for material related to the show, some of which was connected to far-right groups and Jayda Fransen, deputy leader of Britain First.

Two days before the attack, Osborne told a serving soldier in a pub in Cardiff: “I’m going to kill all the Muslims”, the jurors were told.

Mr Rees said Osborne’s former partner Sarah Andrews described the father of four as a loner and a functionin­g alcoholic with an unpredicta­ble temperamen­t who took medication for depression.

“With the benefit of hindsight, she describes him as a ticking time-bomb,” the prosecutor said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cyprus