somebozo
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Spring 2005-Early 2007: Radical London Imam Bakri Admits He Has Been Informant for British Intelligence
A few months before the 7/7 London bombings (see July 7, 2005), journalist Ron Suskind interviews radical London imam Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed. Suskind had recently heard from a British intelligence official that Bakri had helped [British domestic intelligence agency] MI5 on several of its investigations, in Suskinds words, and he asks Bakri about this. According to Suskind, Bakri looks flustered and says, Im upset you know this. Asked why he helped the British, he replies: Because I like it here. My familys here. I like the health benefits. In early 2007, Suskind calls Bakri on the phone. After the 7/7 bombings, Bakri moved from London to Lebanon (see August 6, 2005), but by the time Suskind reaches him, Bakri has moved again to Tripoli, Libya. Bakri admits that he misses Britain and his role there. He says that the British government misses him too, whether they admit it or not. He adds: We were able to control the Muslim youth. The radical preacher that allows a venting of a point of view is preventing violence. Now, many of us are gone or in jail, and weve been replaced by radical jihadis, who take the youth underground. You dont see them until the day they vent with the bombs. Suskind will later comment: Bakri enjoyed his notoriety and was willing to pay for it with information he passed to the police. Its a fabric of subtle interlocking needs: the [British authorities] need be in a backchannel conversation with someone working the steam valve of Muslim anger; Bakri needs health insurance. Bakris role as an informant will not be made public until Suskind mentions it in a book published in August 2008. Suskind will not make clear when Bakris collaboration with MI5 began or ended, or even if he was still collaborating when they spoke in early 2005. [SUSKIND, 2008, PP. 200-202] In 2002, Roland Jacquard, a French counterterrorism expert and government adviser, said that every al-Qaeda operative recently arrested or identified in Europe had come into contact with Bakri at some time or other. [TIME, 5/27/2002]
Source:
The Way of the World: A Story of Truth and Hope in an Age of Extremism: Ron Suskind: 9780061430626: Amazon.com: Books
CNN.com - Al-Qaeda now - May 27, 2002
A few months before the 7/7 London bombings (see July 7, 2005), journalist Ron Suskind interviews radical London imam Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed. Suskind had recently heard from a British intelligence official that Bakri had helped [British domestic intelligence agency] MI5 on several of its investigations, in Suskinds words, and he asks Bakri about this. According to Suskind, Bakri looks flustered and says, Im upset you know this. Asked why he helped the British, he replies: Because I like it here. My familys here. I like the health benefits. In early 2007, Suskind calls Bakri on the phone. After the 7/7 bombings, Bakri moved from London to Lebanon (see August 6, 2005), but by the time Suskind reaches him, Bakri has moved again to Tripoli, Libya. Bakri admits that he misses Britain and his role there. He says that the British government misses him too, whether they admit it or not. He adds: We were able to control the Muslim youth. The radical preacher that allows a venting of a point of view is preventing violence. Now, many of us are gone or in jail, and weve been replaced by radical jihadis, who take the youth underground. You dont see them until the day they vent with the bombs. Suskind will later comment: Bakri enjoyed his notoriety and was willing to pay for it with information he passed to the police. Its a fabric of subtle interlocking needs: the [British authorities] need be in a backchannel conversation with someone working the steam valve of Muslim anger; Bakri needs health insurance. Bakris role as an informant will not be made public until Suskind mentions it in a book published in August 2008. Suskind will not make clear when Bakris collaboration with MI5 began or ended, or even if he was still collaborating when they spoke in early 2005. [SUSKIND, 2008, PP. 200-202] In 2002, Roland Jacquard, a French counterterrorism expert and government adviser, said that every al-Qaeda operative recently arrested or identified in Europe had come into contact with Bakri at some time or other. [TIME, 5/27/2002]
Source:
The Way of the World: A Story of Truth and Hope in an Age of Extremism: Ron Suskind: 9780061430626: Amazon.com: Books
CNN.com - Al-Qaeda now - May 27, 2002