Arab Times

2 remain in custody: police

‘US tourist killed wouldn’t have borne ill feelings towards attacker’

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LONDON, March 27, (Agencies): British police say that two people remain in custody following last week’s attack in London as messaging services face criticism for encrypted networks that allow attackers to communicat­e in secret.

Attacker Khalid Masood is believed to have used the messaging service WhatsApp before running down pedestrian­s on Westminste­r Bridge and storming a gate outside Parliament armed with two knives. Four died in the rampage, including a police officer.

Encryption makes it more difficult to know whether Masood was acting with an accomplice. Britain’s Home Secretary Amber Rudd wants technology companies to do more to make it possible for security services to have access to such messages.

Police say that a 30-year-old man arrested in Birmingham on Sunday and a 58-year-old man arrested shortly after the attack remain in police custody.

Meanwhile, the family of US tourist Kurt Cochran who was killed in last week’s assault on the British parliament said on Monday he would not have borne any ill feelings towards the attacker.

Cochran, 54, and his wife, Melissa, were in Europe to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversar­y when they were mowed down on Westminste­r Bridge by a car driven by British man, Khalid Masood, who went on to fatally stab an unarmed policeman at the parliament building.

The couple from Utah had been due to return to the United States the day after the attack took place last Wednesday. Melissa remains in hospital where she is recovering from a cut to the head, a broken rib and badly injured leg.

“We know that Kurt wouldn’t bear ill feelings towards anyone and we can draw strength as a family from that,” Clint Payne, Cochran’s brother-in-law, told a news conference at police headquarte­rs, just yards from where the attack took place.

“His whole life was an example of focusing on the positive. Not pretending that negative things don’t exist but not living our life in the negative — that’s what we choose to do.”

Cochran was one of four people killed in the assault, Britain’s dead- DUBAI, UAE, March 27, (AP): The British man who killed four people in a rampage in London last week had made three trips to Saudi Arabia in his lifetime. Though millions of foreigners from around the world live and work in the kingdom, Khalid Masood’s time there immediatel­y raised questions about whether the country’s ultraconse­rvative brand of Islam impacted his worldview and radicalize­d him.

The answer is not so simple. Before he stabbed a police officer to death and rammed his vehicle into people on the famed Westminste­r bridge March 22, Masood had been convicted twice of violent crimes involving knife attacks. As with so many other terror attacks across the world, investigat­ors are trying to piece together how the apparent convert to Islam, who was athletic and popular in high school, became radicalize­d.

Some suggest it may have been the 52-year-old’s lengthy stints in prison in the UK that had the greatest impact on him. Investigat­ors are also trying to determine who Masood associated with in Saudi Arabia and whether his time there set him on his future path.

The path to radicaliza­tion is often mined with a complicate­d mix of personal failures, a deep sense of discrimina­tion, mental health problems and a superficia­l understand­ing of religion. Some are moved too by slick propaganda efforts that capitalize on this combustibl­e combinatio­n.

The Islamic State group was quick to claim Masood as “a soldier of the caliphate” but it was unclear whether he had any direct contact with the extremist group or if he was even inspired by their violent ideology.

For now, there are no clear answers.

liest attack since the 2005 London undergroun­d bombings, and his family said they had since been overwhelme­d by the “love of so many people” in London and around the world.

Celebratin­g their anniversar­y, the

With so many possible motives and reasons, here’s a look at why Masood’s time in Saudi Arabia has sparked attention: THE SAUDI CONNECTION Masood spent two years in Saudi Arabia between 2005 and 2006, and between 2008 and 2009. The Saudi Embassy in London says he worked as an English teacher. His last and most recent visit appears to have been in March 2015, when he obtained an “Umra” visa to perform an Islamic pilgrimage to Makkah, as millions of Muslims do annually.

Though Saudi Arabia quickly condemned the London attack, some people believe that prominent Saudi officials were behind one of the world’s most stunning acts of terrorism — the Sept 11 attacks.

Under new legislatio­n, US family members of those killed on 9/11 are gearing up to sue Saudi Arabia for the attacks. They point out that 15 of the 19 Sept 11 hijackers were Saudi citizens, as was al-Qaeda’s late founder Osama bin Laden — though the Saudi government stripped him of his citizenshi­p in 1994.

IS SAUDI ARABIA A HOTBED OF EXTREMISM?

The answer depends on who you ask.

A decade after the 9/11 attacks, clerics across the Arabian Peninsula encouraged young men to join in jihad in Syria.

Though the government made it illegal to encourage fighting abroad in 2014, many Saudi clerics continue to use the pulpit to spread an ultraconse­rvative doctrine known as Wahhabism, which holds a dim view of non-Muslims and regards Shiite Muslims as apostates. The kingdom actively exports this worldview by building and funding mosques and religious schools across the globe.

couple had left the US for the first time to visit Belgium, the Netherland­s, Germany and parts of Britain before visiting London last week to see the neo-Gothic parliament building on the banks of the River Thames.

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