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Posts Tagged ‘UK security and terrorism’

MI5 ‘recruited al-Qaida sympathisers’

Senior Tory says six men were thrown out of security service amid ‘serious concerns’ and demands investigation

A senior Tory MP today called for an investigation into whether MI5 mistakenly recruited al-Qaida sympathisers.

Patrick Mercer, the chairman of the counter-terrorism subcommittee, said six Muslim recruits had been thrown out of the service because of serious concerns over their pasts.

The MP said he was writing to the home secretary, Alan Johnson, to call for an investigation into the matter.

Two of the six men allegedly attended al-Qaida training camps in Pakistan while the others had unexplained gaps of up to three months in their CVs.

Mercer told the Telegraph that the September 11 2001 terror attacks on the US should have prompted the British government to expand the security services, but this did not happen until the bombings on London’s transport network on 7 July 2005.

“It took an attack on this country for such measures to be started,” he said.

“But at this point it was an unseemly rush of which our enemies, not unsurprisingly, took advantage.”

Mercer added that he was concerned al-Qaida sympathisers who may have infiltrated the security services had not all yet been rooted out.

He said the two recruits who had allegedly been to training camps were not dismissed until after they had been given several weeks of training at MI5, but the others were identified before they started training.

A Home Office spokesman later said: “MI5 takes vetting very seriously indeed. All candidates are required to undergo the most comprehensive process of security vetting in the UK.

“Applicants go through extensive vetting and it is not unusual for a number to drop out or fail at the earliest stages for a variety of reasons.”

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New claim of UK torture complicity

Papers suggest intelligence service knew men were being mistreated

A businessman who was held and mistreated in the United Arab Emirates following the London bombings believes he has evidence that British consular officials asked permission from the UK’s own security services to visit him while he was detained.

Heavily redacted documents seen by the Guardian appear to indicate that the request to visit Alam Ghafoor was made to an unidentified British intelligence officer and not to officials in the UAE.

Ghafoor is one of several British men who allege there has been British complicity in their detention and torture while abroad. The businessman, who is 38 and from Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, was detained and tortured while on a business trip to Dubai following the London bombings in July 2005.

Ghafoor and his business partner, Mohammed Rafiq Siddique, flew to the UAE on 4 July. They were dragged out of a restaurant as they dined on 21 July. The two British Muslims say they were threatened with torture, deprived of sleep, subjected to stress positions and told they would be killed and fed to dogs.

Ghafoor has obtained copies of correspondence from consular officials to the Foreign Office in London while he was in custody that show those officials were asking someone other than the UAE authorities for permission to see him. Who that person is, and who they represented, is unclear, as their name was censored before the copies were handed over. Some of the reports were so heavily redacted by the time Ghafoor received them that the only words not blanked are his name.

In one email, dated 25 July, 2005, a consular official wrote: “Today I phoned [name withheld] trying to get permission to see them. First [...] told me that there was no need because they would be deported soon. I asked if we could see them today or tomorrow. [...] told me that [...] would check with the UAE authorities… and would let me know. I didn’t hear from [...] since then. Tomorrow I’ll speak to [...] again.”

Ghafoor, who was released without charge on 30 July, is convinced that the individual to which consular officials were turning for permission to see him was a British intelligence officer. At the time of his interrogation, Ghafoor was told that British security services had requested his questioning.

MI5 and MI6 officers who question terrorism suspects they know are being tortured, are acting in line with a secret government interrogation policy, drawn up after the 9/11 attacks. The policy states: “we cannot be party to such ill treatment nor can we be seen to condone it” and that “it is important that you do not engage in any activity yourself that involves inhumane or degrading treatment of prisoners.” It also advises intelligence officers that if detainees “are not within our custody or control, the law does not require you to intervene” to prevent torture.

According to Philippe Sands, QC, one of the world’s leading experts in international human rights law, the policy almost certainly breaches international human rights.

When Ghafoor asked why he had been picked up, he was shown a photograph and told he resembled one of the 7/7 suicide bombers and must be related to him. His business partner, Siddique, who was also detained and tortured, says he was told he must have been involved in the bombings – not only did he share a name with the bombers – but he lived in Dewsbury, the same Yorkshire town.

Ghafoor said his interrogators questioned his sexuality, as he is not married, and insulted him because he was unable to wash, saying he smelled. He was also punched in the groin.

One interrogator said to him: “In the morning you will be thrown into a pit and the dogs will tear you to bits and I will watch it and enjoy it.”

Eventually, he agreed to sign a false confession admitting he was a friend of the bombers and had organised the London attacks. “I wrote a false confession and put crazy things in it like ‘I have constant contact with Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden’,” he said.

He was told he would be shot by a firing squad the following morning.

When Ghafoor returned home, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. His relationship with his partner broke down and he suffered nightmares, anxiety and paranoia.

Ghafoor is furious that there has been no explanation for his treatment, nor an apology. “I would like to know why I was put through this hell and I would like someone to be accountable.”

Clive Stafford-Smith, the legal director of Reprieve, a not-for-profit human rights organisation, said: “It is impossible for the victims of torture to move on without truth and reconciliation, yet the British government seems intent on covering up what it has done.”

He added: “Until recently, the British security services were told to effectively turn a blind eye to torture.”

The Foreign Office said in a statement that Ghafoor and Siddique were not detained at Britain’s request. “British consular staff visited them on July 30, 2005 to ensure their welfare needs were being addressed. Their detention was a matter for the Dubai authorities … they were not detained at the request of the UK government. We do not participate in, solicit, encourage or condone the use of torture or inhuman or degrading treatment for any purpose.

“Wherever allegations of wrongdoing are made, they are taken seriously and investigated as appropriate.”

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Police face court challenge over film

Gemma Atkinson claims she was handcuffed after recording search of boyfriend on her mobile phone

A woman is to challenge the Metropolitan police in the high court, claiming she was handcuffed, detained and threatened with arrest for filming officers on her mobile phone.

Lawyers for Gemma Atkinson, a 27-year-old who was detained after filming police officers conduct a routine stop and search on her boyfriend, believe her case is the latest example of how police are misusing counterterrorism powers to restrict photography.

Atkinson’s mobile phone recorded part of the incident at Aldgate East underground station on 25 March, one month after Section 58(a) – a controversial amendment to the Terrorism Act – came into force, making it illegal to photograph a police officer if the images are considered “likely to be useful” to a terrorist.

Atkinson handed the footage, in which an officer can be heard telling her it is illegal to film police and demanding to see her phone, to the Guardian and said she was seeking to challenge the force in a judicial review. The incident was captured on CCTV.

The opening part of the mobile phone clip shows two uniformed police officers searching her boyfriend, Fred Grace, 28, by a wall in the station. Atkinson said she felt that police had unfairly targeted Grace, who did not have drugs in his possession, and decided to film the officers in order to hold them to account.

Seconds later, an undercover officer wearing jeans and a black jacket enters the shot, and asks Atkinson: “Do you realise it is an offence under the Terrorism Act to film police officers?” He then adds: “Can you show me what you you just filmed?”

Atkinson stopped filming and placed her phone in her pocket. According to her account of the incident, which was submitted to the Independent Police Complaints Commission that night, the officer tried several times to forcefully grab the phone from her pocket.

Failing to get the phone, he called over two female undercover officers from nearby. Atkinson said he told the women: “This young lady had been filming me and the other officers and it’s against the law. Her phone is in her right jacket pocket and I’m trying to get it.”

An argument ensued, Atkinson said, and five police officers – four of them undercover – backed her into an alcove, insisting they had the right to view her phone.

She said she was detained there for about 25 minutes, during which her wrist was handcuffed and a female officer told her: “We’ll put you under arrest, take to you to the station and look at your phone there.”

A second female officer approached her and said, incorrectly: “Look, your boyfriend’s just been arrested for drugs, so I suggest you do as we say.”

Atkinson claims the male undercover officer who initially approached her repeatedly threatened her with arrest, stating: “We believe you filmed us and that’s against the law so we need to check your phone.” When Atkinson protested, the officer replied: “I don’t want to see myself all over the internet.”

After officers made calls to the police station, possibly for legal advice on the situation, the handcuffs were removed and Atkinson was released.

She said the officers walked away – all but one of them refused to identify themselves to her.

“I felt totally helpless,” she said. “I was being restrained and I felt that no one was listening to me. During this whole thing I was saying, ‘This is a breach of my civil liberties – you can’t do this to me, I’ve done nothing wrong’.”

Atkinson’s solicitors, Bhatt Murphy, believe that faulty guidance to officers about how counterterrorism laws apply to photography in public places may have contributed to her treatment.

Last week, after notification from Bhatt Murphy that they would seek a judicial review of Atkinson’s case at the high court, the Met released the guidance it gives officers.

The force instructs officers that when searching people under the Terrorism Act, they “have the power to view digital images contained in mobile telephones”. It adds that the new offence relating to photographing officers does not apply in normal policing activities.

However, the Met’s guidance, which has been criticised by human rights lawyers and the National Union of Journalists, has not been endorsed by the Home Office, which is drafting its own legal advice for police.

The Met’s guidance is different to that issued by the National Policing Improvement Agency, which specifically advises that “officers do not have a legal power to delete images or destroy film”, and suggests that, while digital images might be viewed during a search, officers “should not normally attempt to examine them”.

A Met spokesman confirmed they had received Atkinson’s complaint.

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UK downgrades terror alert level

Officials reduce assessment of threat from ‘severe’ to ‘substantial’, its lowest level since 9/11

The official assessment of the threat level of an al-Qaida terrorist attack on Britain has been lowered from “severe” – where an attack is deemed highly likely – to “substantial”, where an attack is considered a strong possibility.

The decision to lower the official threat level follows a new assessment by MI5 and the joint terrorism analysis centre, based on intelligence gathered in Britain and abroad on how close terrorist groups may be to staging an attack.

The designation of a “substantial” threat level is the lowest since 9/11. It confirms that the swine flu pandemic is now a bigger threat to the life of the nation than terrorism.

The home secretary, Alan Johnson, acknowledged that fact on Sunday, when he told the BBC’s Andrew Marr programme that swine flu came “above terrorism as a threat to this country”. He said the long-term preparations had involved the whole “Cobra machinery”, a reference to the Cabinet’s emergency committe that handles major disasters.

The decision reportedly follows an official assessment of Operation Pathway, one of MI5′s biggest counterterrorism campaigns, which led to the arrest of 11 Pakistani men in April. All those arrested were released without charge, and no explosives or weapons were found.

The system of threat levels is made up of five stages. At “critical”, an attack is expected imminently. At “severe”, an attack is regarded as highly likely. At “substantial”, an attack is a strong possibility. At “moderate” an attack is possible but not likely. And at “low”, an attack is deemed unlikely.

The home secretary said in a statement: “We still face a real and serious threat from terrorists and the public will notice little difference in the security measures that are in place, and I urge the public to remain vigilant. The police and security services are continuing in their thorough efforts to discover, track and disrupt terrorist activity.”

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Neo-Nazi found guilty of terrorism

• Neil Lewington, 43, built bomb factory in bedroom
• Arrested by chance on train with parts for explosive devices

A neo-Nazi who turned his bedroom into a bomb factory is facing years in jail after being convicted today of terrorism and explosives offences.

Neil Lewington, 43, was arrested by chance on a train on his way to strike his first blow in his racist war against the “non-British”.

The white supremacist, an unemployed electrician who lived with his parents in Tilehurst, Reading, Berkshire, was also trying to perfect tennis-ball bombs which he could throw at the homes of Asians.

He was found guilty at the Old Bailey of having explosives with intent to endanger life and preparing for acts of terrorism.

Lewington had denied all eight charges brought under the Terrorism Act and explosives laws. He was convicted on seven counts and remanded in custody until 8 September.

Judge Peter Thornton said: “The likely outcome is a lengthy sentence of imprisonment.”

Lewington had an “unhealthy interest” in other racist attackers such as London nail bomber David Copeland, America’s Unabomber and Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh.

He was arrested at Lowestoft station in Suffolk on 30 October last year after abusing a female train conductor who challenged him.

Lewington was found to be carrying two firebombs that would have exploded when primed.

Later searches of his home revealed a notebook entitled “Waffen SS UK members’ handbook” with a “device logbook” of drawings of electronics and chemical mixtures. The notebook also contained his boasts of two-man hit squads bombing the UK at random.

Weedkiller, firelighters, three tennis balls with diagrams on how to convert them into shrapnel bombs, firework powder, electrical timers and detonators were found in his bedroom as well.

Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, said: “This man, who had strong if not fanatical rightwing leanings and opinions, was on the cusp of embarking on a campaign of terrorism against those he considered non-British.

“The defendant had in his possession the component parts of two viable improvised incendiary devices.

“He had the parts which, if assembled together, would have created devices which if ignited would have caught alight and caused flames and fire.”

Searches of the bedroom “revealed nothing short of a factory for the production of many such similar devices”, Altman added.

The prosecution could not say where the devices would be placed, but the circumstances showed Lewington was about to commit acts of terrorism.

The court heard he had been unemployed for 10 years and spent his time searching for girlfriends on chatlines.

One woman was put off by him when he said “the only good Paki was a dead Paki” and he would not hit a woman but would “make an exception for a Paki”, the court heard.

Lewington said he was a member of the National Front and wanted the Ku Klux Klan brought back.

Another girlfriend said he spoke of making bombs and asked at which house in her street an Asian family lived.

In a statement read outside the court, Bethan David, of the Crown Prosecution Service’s counter-terror division, said: “While holding racist beliefs is not a crime, however distasteful they may be to most people, planning and preparing to attack or terrorise people with explosive devices is a criminal act.

“The material collected during the investigation, coupled with the nature of the devices that he had made, convinced us that Neil Lewington was a real threat not just to the people that he was targeting but to anyone in the vicinity had he succeeded in detonating his bombs. He had the knowledge and the will to cause destruction, injury and death.”

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Neo-Nazi found guilty of terrorism

• Neil Lewington, 43, built bomb factory in bedroom
• Arrested by chance on train with parts for explosive devices

A neo-Nazi who turned his bedroom into a bomb factory is facing years in jail after being convicted today of terrorism and explosives offences.

Neil Lewington, 43, was arrested by chance on a train on his way to strike his first blow in his racist war against the “non-British”.

The white supremacist, an unemployed electrician who lived with his parents in Tilehurst, Reading, Berkshire, was also trying to perfect tennis-ball bombs which he could throw at the homes of Asians.

He was found guilty at the Old Bailey of having explosives with intent to endanger life and preparing for acts of terrorism.

Lewington had denied all eight charges brought under the Terrorism Act and explosives laws. He was convicted on seven counts and remanded in custody until 8 September.

Judge Peter Thornton said: “The likely outcome is a lengthy sentence of imprisonment.”

Lewington had an “unhealthy interest” in other racist attackers such as London nail bomber David Copeland, America’s Unabomber and Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh.

He was arrested at Lowestoft station in Suffolk on 30 October last year after abusing a female train conductor who challenged him.

Lewington was found to be carrying two firebombs that would have exploded when primed.

Later searches of his home revealed a notebook entitled “Waffen SS UK members’ handbook” with a “device logbook” of drawings of electronics and chemical mixtures. The notebook also contained his boasts of two-man hit squads bombing the UK at random.

Weedkiller, firelighters, three tennis balls with diagrams on how to convert them into shrapnel bombs, firework powder, electrical timers and detonators were found in his bedroom as well.

Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, said: “This man, who had strong if not fanatical rightwing leanings and opinions, was on the cusp of embarking on a campaign of terrorism against those he considered non-British.

“The defendant had in his possession the component parts of two viable improvised incendiary devices.

“He had the parts which, if assembled together, would have created devices which if ignited would have caught alight and caused flames and fire.”

Searches of the bedroom “revealed nothing short of a factory for the production of many such similar devices”, Altman added.

The prosecution could not say where the devices would be placed, but the circumstances showed Lewington was about to commit acts of terrorism.

The court heard he had been unemployed for 10 years and spent his time searching for girlfriends on chatlines.

One woman was put off by him when he said “the only good Paki was a dead Paki” and he would not hit a woman but would “make an exception for a Paki”, the court heard.

Lewington said he was a member of the National Front and wanted the Ku Klux Klan brought back.

Another girlfriend said he spoke of making bombs and asked at which house in her street an Asian family lived.

In a statement read outside the court, Bethan David, of the Crown Prosecution Service’s counter-terror division, said: “While holding racist beliefs is not a crime, however distasteful they may be to most people, planning and preparing to attack or terrorise people with explosive devices is a criminal act.

“The material collected during the investigation, coupled with the nature of the devices that he had made, convinced us that Neil Lewington was a real threat not just to the people that he was targeting but to anyone in the vicinity had he succeeded in detonating his bombs. He had the knowledge and the will to cause destruction, injury and death.”

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Act now over Afghanistan, says Cameron

Tory leader says the government should act to reduce the number of lives lost in war against Taliban

David Cameron today told Gordon Brown he had to provide more leadership to reduce the numbers of British lives lost in Afghanistan.

In the last prime minister’s question time before the summer recess, the Conservative leader said the government should “show greater urgency and make more visible progress” in Afghanistan and said forces needed a more tightly defined mission.

This month 15 British soldiers have died in Afghanistan, taking the death toll to 184, more than that of the Iraq war.

Cameron also accused the government of failing to provide enough helicopters. He told Brown: “The number of helicopters we have in Afghanistan is simply insufficient.” Britain had fewer than 30 in Helmand while the Americans, with similar numbers of troops, had 100.

But as he and Cameron traded quotes by military figures on the issue, Brown said: “We have done everything we can to increase the numbers of helicopters and there will be more helicopters on the ground … While the loss of life is tragic and sad, it is not to do with helicopters.” The budget for helicopters was £6bn over the next 10 years.

The prime minister added: “The purpose of our mission is very clear: to prevent terrorism coming to the streets of Britain.”

Brown said that Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, had responded favourably to his request that the Kabul government provide more police and soldiers in Helmand. “President Karzai has promised that he will provide additional resources to do that.” After October, Britain will provide more training to the Afghan security services, he said.

The head of the British army said earlier today that more coalition troops were needed in Helmand to provide the security for its people to go back to their ordinary lives.

General Sir Richard Dannatt said that “more boots on the ground” were key to success in Helmand, though he stressed that it did not matter whether they belonged to British, American or Afghan troops.

At PMQs, Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, accused Brown of promising lots but doing nothing on bankers’ bonuses, the recession and cleaning up parliament. It was just “business as usual”, Clegg said.

Brown said the opposition parties should go away over the summer and reflect on why they had no policies to deal with the big issues facing Britain.

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Slow Torture: the testimony of Detainee Z

Video: Under Britain’s secret evidence laws, terror suspects can be subjected to virtual house arrest without trial. Actor Lewis al-Samari reads the testimony of an Algerian detainee


Caught in a Home Office trap

Y was sentenced to death in Algeria, but his inhumane immigration bail conditions seem designed to drive him back

Here’s irony for you. Five monologues based on five men living under deportation orders broadcast online, through the Guardian, one a day over a week. But none of the men featured will be able to watch them. For these so-called “threats to national security”, based on secret evidence, access to the internet, a computer or mobile phone is banned.

One of the men, Y, lives under immigration bail conditions in an isolated Home Office-selected location two hours outside London. Each time I visit I undergo a ritual. It involves switching off my mobile phone and digging deep into my handbag for stray USBs, iPods or MP3 players. I try to conceal my laptop under a car seat. Y is not allowed any of these items in the house.

A joint police and immigration search of his home can happen at any time, night or day. Hence the constant need for vigilant adherence to the “house rules”. Y finds it amusing that the state thinks him such a genius that he is deemed a lethal weapon if he were to wield an iPod. Granted, he is rather good at Sudoko after years of practice in isolation, but, no offence to Y, such electrical wizardry is beyond him.

This level of intrusion has a purpose. The objective of the incessant hardship, the isolation, the forced living on the outer edges of sanity and civilisation is to force these men back to the torture cells they escaped from. Y was tortured in Algeria – the evidence is clear from the scars on the front and back of his head. His crime was to speak out against human rights abuses in the early 1990s. When it was clear that he had to leave he came to the UK, and with his powerful testimony he was given full rights to remain. Not a false passport or fake name in sight. Leaving saved his life. Not long after, he was issued with a death sentence in absentia in Algeria. The UK’s desire to hand him back hints largely at maintaining diplomatic ties and is nothing to do with national security.

As a result, I see an isolated edgy young man turned old through the “slow torture” of these last eight years in the UK. Detained for a total of 57 months in prison – first for the ricin case, for which he was fully acquitted, then detained again based on…? Your guess is as good as mine. It’s called secret evidence and neither Y or his lawyers have any idea what it is.

When I visit, we go to Tesco for coffee. It’s the only place to go within his boundaries. On a rare occasion, Y gets clearance for the town centre but the time constraints are so challenging that the entire trip is adrenalin-inducing. A permitted three-hour trip is mainly spent on the bus getting there and back. And there is always a “random” police search of the house the next day.

When I leave, the tension in my head remains for some time. Even as a visitor you become infected by the pungent poison administered so lavishly by the Home Office and the security services to these men. This is Kafka’s Trial, 2009.

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Pakistan officials back torture claims

Human Rights Watch says Pakistani intelligence officials have confirmed torture took place with full knowledge of British agents

Further evidence of the close involvement of British agents in the torture of British citizens in Pakistan has emerged during a series of interviews with Pakistani intelligence officers.

Researchers from the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) say several Pakistani officials have corroborated accounts of torture given by several victims. The officials not only made clear that their counterparts in British intelligence were fully aware of the methods they were employing during interrogations but claim the British agents were “grateful” it was happening.

In a statement issued today , HRW said senior Pakistani officials had told it “on numerous occasions” that British officials were aware of the mistreatment of a number of terrorism suspects from the UK, including Rangzieb Ahmed and Salahuddin Amin, who are now serving life sentences in the UK, Zeeshan Siddiqui, whose whereabouts is unknown, and Rashid Rauf, who is said to have died in a US missile strike after escaping from custody.

HRW said senior officials in Pakistan had confirmed the “overall authenticity” of the allegations made by Ahmed, from Rochdale, who had three fingernails ripped out of his left hand after MI5 and Greater Manchester police drew up a list of questions and handed them to his Pakistani captors.

The sources said that an account given by Amin, from Luton, of the manner in which he was tortured in between meetings with MI5 officers was “essentially accurate”, adding that his was a “high pressure” case in which the demand for information made by both British and American intelligence officers was “insatiable”.

HRW says it was told by senior Pakistani officials that the UK and the US were “party” to Amin’s detention and were “perfectly aware that we were using all means possible to extract information from him and were grateful that we were doing so”.

HRW was told by senior Pakistani intelligence officers that their British counterparts were well aware that Siddiqui, from London, was being “processed in the traditional way”. These sources said they worked so closely with the British officials that those officials were in effect interrogating Siddiqui even though they were not in the torture chamber.

In other cases, Pakistani agents who were dealing with their British counterparts while torturing British citizens say they were “under pressure to perform” and to extract as much information as possible.

Furthermore, HRW says a British intelligence source has told it that plans to deport one British citizen from Pakistan to the UK and prosecute him for terrorism offences had to be dropped because the individual had been so severely tortured.

The Pakistani interrogators’ accounts of their close working relationship with British intelligence officers are to be detailed in a HRW report later this year.

In today’s statement it said: “Officials in both the Pakistani and UK governments have privately confirmed to Human Rights Watch that British officials were aware of specific cases of mistreatment, knew that Pakistani intelligence agencies routinely used torture on detained terror suspects and others and failed to intervene to prevent torture in cases involving British citizens and in cases in which it had an investigative interest.

“A well placed official within the UK government told Human Rights Watch that allegations of UK complicity made by Human Rights Watch in testimony to the UK parliament’s Joint Human Rights Committee in February 2009 were accurate. The official encouraged Human Rights Watch to continue its research into the subject. Another Whitehall source told Human Rights Watch that its research was ‘spot on’.

“According to these UK officials, as a result of co-operation on specific cases, the Pakistani intelligence services shared information from abusive interrogations with British officials, which was used in prosecutions in UK courts and other investigations. UK law enforcement and intelligence officials passed questions to Pakistani officials for use in interrogation sessions in individual cases knowing that these Pakistani officials were using torture.”

HRW said there was now a compelling case for a judicial inquiry into Britain’s role in torture in Pakistan. Brad Adams, HRW’s Asia director, said: “The prime minister, the foreign secretary, former prime minister Tony Blair and others have repeatedly said that the UK opposes torture. They repeatedly deny allegations that the UK has encouraged torture by Pakistan’s intelligence agencies. But saying this over and over again doesn’t make it true. There is now sufficient evidence in the public domain to warrant a judicial inquiry.”

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Revealed: evidence MI5 tried to hide

MP David Davis’s dramatic parliamentary move exposes treatment of terror suspect

The true depth of British involvement in the torture of terrorism suspects overseas and the manner in which that complicity is concealed behind a cloak of courtroom secrecy was laid bare last night when David Davis MP detailed the way in which one counter-terrorism operation led directly to a man suffering brutal mistreatment.

In a dramatic intervention using the protection of parliamentary privilege, the former shadow home secretary revealed how MI5 and Greater Manchester police effectively sub-contracted the torture of Rangzieb Ahmed to a Pakistani intelligence agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI), whose routine use of torture has been widely documented.

This is the first time that the information has entered the public domain. Previously it has been suppressed through the process of secret court hearings and, had the Guardian or other media organisations reported it, they would have exposed themselves to the risk of prosecution for contempt of court.

Davis told MPs that although sufficient evidence had been gathered to ensure Ahmed could be prosecuted for serious terrorism offences, he was permitted to fly from Manchester to Islamabad, the Pakistani capital, in 2006 while under surveillance. He then detailed the way in which the British authorities:

• Tipped off the ISI that Ahmed was on his way.

• Told the ISI he was a terrorist and suggested that he should be detained.

• Were aware of the methods used by the ISI while questioning terrorism suspects.

• Drew up a list of questions for the ISI to put to Ahmed.

• Questioned him themselves after he had been in ISI custody for around 13 days.

The officers from MI5 and MI6 who interrogated Ahmed should have known his detention was unlawful because he had not been brought before a court. Ahmed says he told these officers he was being tortured and that signs of his mistreatment would have been evident.

He says he was whipped, beaten, deprived of sleep and sexually humiliated. At one point three fingernails were ripped out of his left hand. He says this was done slowly, over a period of days, while he was being asked questions which he believes were handed to the ISI by British and US authorities.

Addressing the Commons last night, Davis said: “A more obvious case of outsourcing of torture, a more obvious case of passive rendition, I cannot imagine. He should have been arrested by the UK in 2006. He was not. The authorities knew he intended to travel to Pakistan, so they should have prevented that. Instead, they suggested the ISI arrest him. They knew he would be tortured, and they organised to construct a list of questions and provide it to the ISI.”

Ahmed was deported to the UK after 13 months in Pakistani custody, prosecuted largely on the basis of evidence gathered before he had travelled to that country, and jailed for life after being found guilty of membership of al-Qaida and directing a terrorist organisation. The jury at Manchester crown court was not told he had been tortured, and some details of the police and MI5 counter-terrorism operation that resulted in his torture would have been heard in camera, before his trial began and after the media and the public had been excluded from court.

Yesterday the Guardian reported that Ahmed alleges he was recently visited by an MI5 officer and a police officer who said they could arrange for his sentence to be reduced, or for him to be paid money, if he withdrew his complaints about torture during his forthcoming appeal and during civil proceedings in which he is suing the British government. Davis said if this claim was true it was “frankly monstrous”.

Ahmed is one of several British citizens and residents who have alleged British complicity in their torture in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Egypt and the UAE during the so-called war on terror.

Davis told MPs : “For each case, the government has denied complicity, but at the same time fiercely defended the secrecy of its actions which has made it impossible to put the full facts in the public domain, despite the clear public interest to doing so.”

Ahmed, he said, “was astonishingly not arrested but was allowed to leave the country … the British intelligence agencies wrote to their opposite numbers in Pakistan, the ISI, to suggest that they arrest him”. Davis went on: “The intelligence officer who wrote to the Pakistanis did so in full knowledge of the normal methods used by the ISI against terrorist suspects that it holds.”

Davis said Ahmed was “viciously tortured by the ISI. He [Ahmed] claims among other things, he was beaten with wooden staves, the size of cricket stumps,whipped with a three-foot length of tyre rubber and had three fingernails removed from his left hand. There is a dispute between British intelligence officers as to exactly when his fingernails were removed, but an independent pathologist confirmed it happened during the period when he was in Pakistani custody.”

Davis called on ministers to examine the in camera sections of legal argument before Ahmed’s trial and all relevant police and intelligence agency records; publish current guidelines on interrogation of detainees held overseas; and establish if any intelligence officer was disciplined.

“The judge in the court case intimated that disciplinary action should be considered. Was this done? If not, why not?”

Davis also said there was a pressing need for an inquiry into Britain’s involvement in torture. “The Americans have made a clean breast of their complicity, whilst explicitly not prosecuting the junior officers who were acting under instruction. We have done the opposite. As it stands, we are awaiting a police investigation which will presumably end in the prosecution of frontline officers. At the same time the government is fighting tooth and nail to use state secrecy to cover up both crimes and political embarrassments, to protect those who are the real villains of the piece, those who approved the policies in the first place.”

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Anti-terror chief warns of budget cuts

• John Yates says unit faces first cutbacks in five years
• Concern over complacency and ‘criminal justice fatigue’

Counter-terrorism police are facing their first budget cuts since the emergence of the Islamist extremist threat in the UK, the country’s most senior anti-terror officer warned today.

Assistant commissioner John Yates said that after five years of generous growth, his unit faced making cuts in the year before London hosts the 2012 Olympic games.

He expressed concerns that the public were growing tired of the fight against terrorism and by the use of control orders, which the House of Lords said last month contravened the European convention on human rights.

Speaking at the Association of Chief Police Officers conference in Manchester, Yates said he would be “naive” to believe the fight against al-Qaida would escape the recession and the impact of a £90bn hole in public finances.

“We are going to have to robustly look at where we can make savings, he said. “We are already pretty lean but the pressure will be on and I cannot imagine counter-terrorism funding is not going to be affected. If things are not seen to be happening then people will say: ‘Do you really need the money?’”

Yates said attitudes towards counter-terrorism had changed and he was concerned about public complacency. “There’s a criminal justice fatigue around counter-terrorism … around things like control orders. It is difficult because we know what sensitive intelligence is telling us, there is a lot of activity going on out there, a lot of activity which means that the threat is still there.”

Threat levels in the UK remain at severe, which means an attack is highly likely. They may come down to “substantial” in the near future, Yates said, but that still meant an attack was a strong possibility, and made little practical difference to those on the frontline.

“It’s a bit like the weather. The climate is pretty grim but the weather can change,” said Yates.

With the prospect of a static budget in 2011, he said cuts would have to be made to backroom staff initially. Anti-terror police would also be fighting for funds with the Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca). Organised crime is responsible for laundering £15bn of criminal profits through the economy, putting 30 tonnes of heroin on the streets each year, organising the trafficking of women and children for sexual purposes, carrying out fraud to the tune of £20bn a year and importing illegal firearms. But the budget for Soca is about £400m, compared with the £2.5bn a year designated for the fight against terrorism, leading to accusations it is not being taken seriously.

The government tomorrow publishes five reports on the threat from serious and organised crime. Senior officers have examined whether to tack on organised crime units to the four counter-terrorist hubs around the country.

Even with such streamlining, Yates said he was under no illusions that staff would have to be cut within counter-terrorism. “Like any part of policing you are always looking at stripping out the back office before you look at the frontline. It would be naive of me to say that is not going to be the case,” he said.

“We are all right for the next two years but there is going to be a comprehensive spending review. Up to 2011 we are fine but thereafter there is a challenge. We have got the Olympics as well, there will be a challenge. We will want to grow against a backdrop of falling budgets.”

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Tube ‘still vulnerable to terror attack’

Report on counter-terrorism policy finds London transport network will always be a target for would-be terrorists

The London tube and bus network remains “extremely vulnerable” to terrorist attack, according to a Commons report published on the fourth anniversary of the 7 July 2005 suicide bomb attacks.

The London 2012 Olympics also remains “another critical area of vulnerability”, according to the report from the Commons home affairs select committee published today.

In their review of the government’s counter-terrorism policy, the MPs say airport-style security will never be compatible with the demands of a mass transit system that carries millions of passengers every day.

However, the committee says that the capital’s transport network is a key point of vulnerability for Britain, and there is “no room for complacency”.

The MPs say that despite the heroism of many Transport for London staff, the July 2005 attacks revealed fundamental failings, particularly inadequate and unreliable communications.

Since then a new system, Airwave, has been introduced, which allows underground communications between the emergency services and London Underground staff. A series of counter-terrorism exercises has also been staged to better prepare staff.

“The London Underground network will always be a high-profile and iconic target for would-be terrorists, as is the case with similar networks in other countries vulnerable to terrorism,” the MPs conclude.

“We would, nevertheless, seek to reassure the Commons and the public that a great deal of work has been done, both overtly and behind the scenes, to protect the millions of passengers who use the Transport for London network every day. However, there is no room for complacency, and this work must remain a high priority.”

Keith Vaz, the committee chair, said the continuing and grave threat from terrorism must never be underestimated.

“However,” he added, “what we saw of the Office of Security and Counter-Terrorism and the way it is implementing Project Contest, the government’s comprehensive counter-terrorist strategy, gave us every confidence that the government’s apparatus is effective and ‘joined up’ and capable of the large and difficult task it faces. That is not to say there is any room for complacency, and there is always more to be done.”

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7/7 memorial: ‘Terrorists cannot win’

Hyde Park monument to 52 victims echoes steely determination of Londoners after attacks, says mayor

A memorial to the 52 people killed in the 7 July attacks in London will be officially unveiled today to coincide with the fourth anniversary of the bombings.

The memorial, in Hyde Park in London’s West End, consists of 52 stainless steel pillars, one for each victim. These are grouped in four clusters, to mark the four locations of the attacks: Tavistock Square, Edgware Road, King’s Cross and Aldgate.

There is also a 1.4 tonne stainless steel plaque with the names of all those who were killed. The Prince of Wales and Tessa Jowell, the humanitarian assistance minister, will lead the nation in remembering those killed.

Saba Mozakka, 28, whose mother, Behnaz Mozakka – a 47-year-old biomedical officer – was killed on a tube train as it travelled from King’s Cross to Russell Square, was one of six relatives of victims on the design board that worked to produce the monument.

“My family will never, ever be the same after what took place on 7 July 2005. We want very clearly for future generations to see the devastation that was caused by these murderous and callous acts,” she said.

Mozakka said the families had wanted a memorial that would be very prominent in London and provide a “reflective space”. “We are very proud of the fact the memorial would be in Hyde Park and reflect everything good about London – its vibrancy.”

Architect Kevin Carmody, of Carmody Groarke, worked closely with the families, the government and the Royal Parks to create the monument. He described it as giving “a sense of the randomness of the loss of life”.

The prime minister, Gordon Brown, the Tory leader, David Cameron, the Liberal Democrat leader, Nick Clegg, the London mayor, Boris Johnson, and senior figures from the emergency services and representatives of other organisations will be present at the unveiling ceremony.

Johnson said the memorial “echoes the steely determination shown by Londoners in the days following the bombings”.

Johnson, Jowell, Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall will meet the families of those killed in the bombings before the event begins.

The prince and Jowell will address the audience before Sir Trevor MacDonald, who is hosting the ceremony, reads out the names of the 52 victims and a minute’s silence is observed.

Prince Charles will then lay a wreath on behalf of the nation while the duchess will leave a floral tribute for the families.

Graham Foulkes, whose 22-year-old son, David, was killed in the Edgware Road bombing, said: “To me, it sends out a clear message to bombers and terrorists – that no matter what they do, they just cannot win, because we value every single life.”

Foulkes, from Oldham in Greater Manchester, said calls for a memorial by victims’ families and survivors had initially been obstructed by ministers but the Department for Culture, Media and Sport had been “absolutely terrific” in bringing the idea to fruition.

However, he is still angry at the government’s refusal to hold an independent inquiry into the atrocities.

“The frustration is enormous – knowing that David died and they are not interested in finding out how to prevent it ever happening again,” he said.

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MI5 ‘tried to bribe torture victim’

Exclusive: Jailed torture victim says he was offered cash to drop collusion claim

The security service MI5 is being accused of attempting to pervert the course of justice by offering a man inducements to drop his allegation that its officers colluded in his torture.

Rangzieb Ahmed had three of his fingernails ripped out after MI5 and Greater Manchester police (GMP) drew up a list of questions for officers from a notorious Pakistani intelligence agency who had detained him in Pakistan. He was later deported to the UK and jailed for terrorism offences. Ahmed says he was visited in prison by an MI5 officer and a police officer who offered to secure a reduction in his sentence or a payment of money to withdraw his torture complaints when his appeal against conviction is heard later this year. His lawyers have written to the Crown Prosecution Service to complain that the approach was “grossly inappropriate” and amounted to an attempt to pervert the course of justice.

As well as lodging an appeal against his conviction, Ahmed is also suing the British government for damages arising out of his treatment in Pakistan. It is thought that his lawyers are planning to rely to some extent on a judgment made after legal argument that preceded his trial, the full details of which are being kept secret at the request of MI5 and GMP.

In an interview with the Guardian last week, Ahmed, 33, from Rochdale, says he received a visit at Manchester prison last April from a man in his 40s who identified himself as an MI5 officer, accompanied by a man in his mid-30s who said he was a police officer. “They said they wanted my advice about tackling extremism and then said they could offer me protection if I helped them. Then they said, ‘If you withdraw what you are saying about torture, we can make a deal with you to reduce your sentence, or if you want to take money we can give you money.’ “

Ahmed’s solicitor, Tayab Ali, of the London law firm Irvine Thanvi Natas, said: “Any attempt to conceal evidence of torture would amount, in this case, to an attempt to pervert the course of justice, and I would expect the courts to take a very serious view of the matter.”

Asked about the allegation, a Home Office spokesman said: “We don’t comment on matters of security. Security service officers act within the law.”

Ahmed had been under surveillance in Manchester and Dubai before travelling to Pakistan where he was picked up and tortured by that country’s Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI).

He was deported to Britain 13 months later and prosecuted on the basis of evidence gathered during the surveillance operation. His lawyers argued unsuccessfully that his trial should not proceed because of the torture he had suffered.

Ahmed was convicted of being a member of al-Qaida and directing a terrorist organisation, and jailed for life. What role, if any, MI5 and GMP may have played in his detention is unclear.

The court heard that two British intelligence officers questioned Ahmed while he was in ISI custody, and he says that the signs of the torture he was enduring would have been obvious to them.

The officers would have been operating in line with a government interrogation policy drawn up for MI5 and MI6 officers in the wake of the September 2001 al-Qaida attacks, which permitted them to question people whom they knew were being tortured, and to submit questions to the torturers, as long as they were not seen to condone what was happening.

The existence of the policy remained a secret until earlier this year, when the high court released a transcript of the cross-examination of an MI5 officer who interrogated Binyam Mohamed, a British resident detained in Pakistan in 2002. The attorney general has since called in Scotland Yard to investigate possible criminal conduct on the part of that officer and those who managed him. Last month the Guardian disclosed that Tony Blair knew of the existence of the secret policy. It remains unclear what Blair knew of its consequences, however.

He has been asked repeatedly what role he played in approving it and whether he was aware that it had led to people being tortured. His spokesman responded by saying that he had never authorised the use of torture.

There has been mounting international concern about Britain’s involvement in the torture of detainees held by overseas intelligence agencies during the so-called war on terror. Earlier this year Martin Scheinin, a UN special rapporteur on human rights, reported that British intelligence personnel had “interviewed detainees who were held incommunicado by the Pakistani ISI in so-called safe houses, where they were being tortured”.

Scheinin said: “The active participation by a state through the sending of interrogators or questions, or even the mere presence of intelligence personnel at an interview with a person who is being held in places where he is tortured or subject to other inhuman treatment, can be reasonably understood as implicitly condoning torture.” Several men have alleged that they were questioned by British intelligence officers after being tortured by Pakistani agents. Most of the men were subsequently released without charge. Allegations of British collusion in torture have also been made by British men detained in Egypt, Bangladesh and the United Arab Emirates.

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Police fear terror attack by far-right groups

• Extremists want to stoke race tensions, officer warns
• Counter-terrorism unit diverting resources to threat
• No specific intelligence of planned strike, sources say

Scotland Yard’s counter-terrorism command fears that right-wing extremists will stage a deadly terrorist attack in Britain to try to stoke racial tensions, the Guardian has learned.

Senior officers say it will be a “spectacular” that is designed to kill. The counter-terrorism unit has redeployed officers to increase its monitoring of the extreme right’s potential to stage attacks.

Commander Shaun Sawyer told a meeting of British Muslims concerned about the danger to their communities that police were responding to the growing threat.

Sawyer said of the far right: “I fear that they will have a spectacular… they will carry out an attack that will lead to a loss of life or injury to a community somewhere. They’re not choosy about which community.”

He said the aim would be to cause a “breakdown in community cohesion”.

Sawyer revealed that the Met commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, had asked the counter-terrorism command, SO15, to examine what the economic downturn would mean for far-right violence. The assessment concluded that the recession would increase the possibility of it.

Sawyer told the meeting last Wednesday that more of his officers needed to be deployed to try to thwart neo-Nazi-inspired violence. He said the terrorist threat posed by al-Qaida remained the unit’s priority, but said of its far-right section: “It is a small desk … we need to grow that unit.” Sources have told the Guardian that while they believe the neo-Nazi terrorist threat has grown, they have no specific intelligence of an attack.

“There is an increased possibility of violence from the far right. There is a trend,” said one senior source, adding that the ideology of the violent right was driven by “people who don’t like immigration, people who don’t like Islam. We’re seeing a resurgence of anti-semitism as well.”

The meeting at which Sawyer spoke was staged by the Muslim Safety Forum, whose chair, Abdurahman Jafar, said: “Muslims are the first line of victims in the extreme right’s campaign of hate and division and they make no secret about that. Statistics show a strong correlation between the rise of racist and Islamophobic hate crime and the ascendancy of the BNP.”

It is a decade since an extreme rightwing terrorist has used bombs to claim lives in Britain. In 1999, David Copeland struck three targets in London. His attack on a gay pub in Soho, London, killed three people and left scores injured. It followed attacks against the Muslim community in Brick Lane, east London, and the bombing of a market in Brixton, south London.

The senior source said: “When Copeland attacked we did not have the religious tensions with the Muslim community. What kind of schism would a Copeland-type event cause now?”

The far-right threat to Britain’s Jewish communities is monitored by the Community Security Trust, which says attempted terrorist violence by neo-Nazis has increased in the past few years. It says nine white men have been “convicted of offences involving explosives, terrorist plots, violent campaigns or threats to carry them out”.

David Rich, of the CST, said: “There’s no one directing people, it’s a mindset” – a reference to the easy availability of extremist right-wing material and information about making bombs.

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Judge overturns terror suspect’s ‘exile’

High court rules evidence kept secret from suspect made it impossible to fight order to leave his London home

A government decision to “exile” a terrorism suspect from London based on secret evidence must be revoked, the high court ruled today.

A judge said the decision was flawed because the father of five, identified only as BM, had not been given enough information to be able to instruct lawyers to challenge his exile.

But the judge said he would have upheld the move if the law had allowed him to rely on the secret evidence kept from BM.

BM, 36, is accused by the security services of being “a prominent member of a network of Islamist extremists”.

He was forced, through a modification to a control order already restricting his movements, to move out of the east London area to a one-bedroom flat in Leicester.

The government said the move was necessary to stop BM associating with extremist contacts “with a view to engaging in terrorist-related activity” and there was a danger of him absconding.

BM’s lawyers argued that his continuing “internal exile”, imposed in May, infringed his civil right to occupy his home.

Mr Justice Mitting ruled that the modification deprived BM “of a civil right for a significant period”.

The judge said the home secretary had attempted to justify interfering with that right by arguing there was a risk of BM absconding and his removal from London was necessary to minimise that risk.

But the government had refused to disclose its secret reasons openly, and that meant the decision to make the modification had to be treated as flawed.

The home secretary’s refusal to reveal secret reports to BM meant the court was left with “a bare assertion” that there was a risk of absconding, and that assertion had to be treated by the court as “groundless”.

But the judge said there was “closed material” – evidence heard by him in secret – that would have led to him coming to a different decision if the law had allowed him to take it into account..

The judge said: “On the basis of the closed material, I would have decided that the decision was not flawed and would have upheld the modification, notwithstanding its significant and highly adverse impact upon BM’s family, in particular upon his children.”

The judge gave the home secretary seven days to revoke the order and return BM to his home.

Government lawyers are considering whether to mount an urgent appeal.

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Government blocks anti-terror chief’s book

Court injunction on Andy Hayman’s The Terrorist Hunters, which includes details of De Menezes and Litvinenko cases

The attorney general has blocked the publication of a book by Britain’s former head of counter-terrorism, Andy Hayman, that gives the inside story of the fight against Islamist extremism.

Lady Scotland stepped in at the last minute to obtain an injunction preventing The Terrorist Hunters from going on sale today. The move came even though copies of the book had been sent two months ago to the Crown Prosecution Service, the Cabinet Office, MI5 and MI6 and the Metropolitan Police Authority.

Its author, the retired Scotland Yard assistant commissioner Andy Hayman, gives a behind-the-scenes account of the 7 July attacks, the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes and the fight against terror.

He wrote about the murder of the Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko and his meetings with top-level political and intelligence officials.

Thousands of copies of the 372-page book were delivered to bookshops nationwide ahead of its publication today.

An advisory notice highlighting the injunction, granted by an unnamed high court judge, was circulated to newspaper editors at 11.45 last night.

The full reasons for the injunction cannot be published for legal reasons linked to continuing criminal proceedings.

The book, however, was still available for sale on the Amazon website today, which stated: “Get it by Friday if you order in the next five hours.”

The Times newspaper serialised sections of the Bantam Press book, co-written by the former BBC home affairs correspondent Margaret Gilmore.

Last week the Metropolitan police commissioner, Sir Paul Stephenson, complained that he was not given a preview of the book’s contents. He told a meeting of the Metropolitan Police Authority that he was reluctant to give it more publicity.

Stephenson said members of the force’s watchdog might like to consider whether senior officers should be allowed to publish such books.

“I find it surprising as commissioner that I have no right on this occasion to have access to the book before it is published. That surprises me. It is troublesome and it does not help good conduct.”

A spokeswoman for Bantam Press owner Random House declined to comment.

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White supremacist ‘planned racist bombings’

Old Bailey told Neil Lewington had ‘unhealthy interest’ in bombers Timothy McVeigh, David Copeland and Ted Kaczynski

A white supremacist arrested by chance at a railway station was “on the cusp” of launching a campaign of terrorism, the Old Bailey in London heard today.

Neil Lewington had developed a bomb factory in his bedroom at his parents’ home and aimed to target “those he considered non-British”, jurors were told.

He had an “unhealthy interest” in the London nail bomber, David Copeland, America’s Unabomber Ted Kaczynski and Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh, the court heard.

Lewington, 43, was arrested at Lowestoft station in Suffolk last year after abusing a female train conductor. He was found to be carrying the component parts of two “viable improvised incendiary devices”, the court was told.

Later searches of his home revealed a notebook entitled Waffen SS UK Members’ Handbook, containing drawings of electronics and chemical mixtures.

Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, said: “The effect of these finds is to prove that this man, who had strong if not fanatical rightwing leanings and opinions, was on the cusp of embarking on a campaign of terrorism against those he considered non-British.”

Lewington, who lived with his parents in Tilehurst, Reading, Berkshire, is accused of preparing for terrorism by having bomb parts in a public place.

He also faces two charges of having articles for terrorism including weedkiller, firelighters and three tennis balls, plus two charges of having documents for terrorism and another of collecting information for terrorism.

Two further counts allege he possessed an explosive device “with intent to endanger life” and that he had explosives, namely weedkiller.

He denies all eight charges.

Lewington had travelled to see a woman in Lowestoft on 30 October when he was arrested after drinking and smoking on the train and urinating in public, the court heard. He was arrested for a public order offence and his bag was searched.

Altman said: “The defendant had in his possession the component parts of two viable improvised incendiary devices, which, if assembled together, would have created devices which, if ignited, would have caught alight and caused flames and fire.

“Later searches of the house where the defendant lived revealed nothing short of a factory for the production of many such similar devices.

“In addition to all of that the police discovered evidence that the defendant sympathised with and quite clearly adhered to white supremacist and racist views.”

Lewington had two video compilations of footage about bombers and bombings.

Altman said: “In addition to his extreme views on race and ethnicity, the defendant had an unhealthy interest in bombers as well as bombings. Lewington was someone who had taken his interest and his practical skills far beyond the mere intellectual or academic levels.”

The court was told Lewington left school at 16 without qualifications but had worked in a number of electronics jobs. He had been unemployed for 10 years after being sacked for being drunk.

He lived with his parents but had not spoken to his father for 10 years. His mother said he had placed Plasticine in the keyhole of his bedroom so no one could see inside.

Lewington had met women after talking on mobile phone chatlines. Altman said. One woman was put off by him when he said “the only good Paki is a dead Paki” and he would not hit a woman but would “make an exception for a Paki”.

He said he was a member of the National Front and wanted the Ku Klux Klan brought back, it was alleged.

Another woman said he bought a child’s chemistry set from Toys R Us and told her he could make explosives using it and household items, said Altman. “He said he had made tennis ball bombs and taken them to the woods to explode them. Lewington was found in possession of three tennis balls and a diagram showing how to convert them into shrapnel bombs.”

Another girlfriend said he spoke of making bombs and asked at which house in her street an Asian family lived.

“He explained how he could throw a tennis ball bomb or place it somewhere and then run away,” Altman said.

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Ulster loyalists finally lay down their arms

Terror groups boost Northern Ireland peace process by disposing of guns and explosives

After inflicting almost 1,000 deaths and engaging in nearly 40 years of terrorism in Northern Ireland, loyalist paramilitaries announced yesterday that they were disarming.

In a significant boost to the province’s power sharing settlement, all three main loyalist terrorist organisations – the Ulster Volunteer Force, the Red Hand Commando and the Ulster Defence Association – said their guns and explosives were being disposed of.

The British government said it was an “historic day” for the people of Northern Ireland. Secretary of state Shaun Woodward said: “For those who have doubted the political process it is proof that the politics works and guns have no place in a normal society. Today’s acts of leadership are further testimony to the transformation in Northern Ireland.”

The UVF and RHC held a joint press conference during which an unmasked middle-aged man in a business suit read out a statement on behalf of the groups. “The leader of the Ulster Volunteer Force and Red Hand Commando confirms it has completed the process of rendering ordnance totally, and irreversibly, beyond use,” he said.

Inside a packed church hall on the Newtonards Road in east Belfast, before an audience that included many former UVF prisoners and the widow of the late loyalist political leader David Ervine, the UVF member disclosed that decommissioning was almost scuppered by Real IRA and Continuity IRA attacks. He said: “In March 2009, all preparations were suspended following the attacks on UK citizens at Masserene Barracks and Craigavon. Assurances were sought from the government, and the Irish government, that those responsible, in whatever jurisdiction, would be vigorously pursued … Only when the forthright assurances were give, and it became clear that they would be honoured, did our process resume.”

Billy Hutchinson, who was a UVF prisoner and is now a representative of the UVF-linked Progressive Unionist Party (PUP), confirmed that the destruction of guns and bombs took place in the presence of three “independent international witnesses” as well as officials from General John de Chastelain’s independent decommissioning body. He said the three witnesses reported back to three governments, the US, Britain and the Republic of Ireland.

During his speech, Hutchinson and his PUP colleague Dawn Purvis paid tribute to Ervine in his efforts to push loyalists towards peace and disarmament. With tears in her eyes, Ervine’s widow Jeanette said: “I just wish David had been here to see all the hard work he put into the peace process coming to what he called ‘the endgame’. This day is what he was working towards and I’m so proud he played his part to get us here.”

About 90 minutes after the joint announcement, in an office 200 yards along Newtonards Road, the UDA issued a statement saying it had begun to put all its arms beyond use. “We have held meetings with General John de Chastelain and his team, who have witnessed an act of decommissioning … by carrying out this act we are helping to build a new and better Northern Ireland where conflict is a thing of the past. The dark days are behind us and it is time to move on. There is no place for guns and violence in the new society we are building.”

A rebel faction of the UDA, the South East Antrim Brigade, is the only loyalist group that has not disarmed. However, the unit’s leadership told the Observer it is in negotiations to disarm before London’s August deadline, after which police will hunt for arms in loyalist hands.

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