• 23:30
  • Wednesday ,07 June 2017
العربية

‘Jihadis Next Door’: London police pressed for answers

By-egyptindependent

Copts and Poliltical Islam

00:06

Wednesday ,07 June 2017

‘Jihadis Next Door’: London police pressed for answers

Political leaders on Tuesday continued to question why authorities failed to apprehend Khuram B., one of the suspects in Saturday’s attack, after police announced he was known to security services and MI5, Britain’s domestic spy agency.

Authorities did not say how Khuram Butt, a British citizen born in Pakistan, had come to the attention of law enforcement agents, but local media reported that in 2016, Butt appeared in a Channel 4 documentary about British extremists entitled “The Jihadis Next Door.”
 
“Not unreasonably, these questions are being asked. I’m sure the police will look into what they knew, what they could have done, what they did do and if anything could have been done differently,” London Mayor Sadiq Khan told BBC.
 
“What we need to do is make sure that we ask these questions and the police and the security services respond and answer the legitimate questions we all have,” Khan added.
 
Police Identify Suspects
 
London police on Monday identified the suspected attackers as 27-year-old Khuram B. and Rachid R., who claimed both Libyan and Moroccan nationality. Rachid R. was reportedly 30 years old, but he also went by the name Rachid E., whose age was listed as 25.
 
Police said although Khuram B. had been known by police, “there was no intelligence to suggest that this attack was being planned and the investigation had been prioritized accordingly.”
 
“I would urge anyone with information about these men, their movements in the days and hours before the attack and the places they frequented to come forward,” national counter-terrorism police chief Mark Rowley said in a statement. The terrorist attack in central London on Saturday left seven people dead and dozens more wounded, with 36 people still being treated in hospitals as of Tuesday.
 
Twelve of the people arrested as part of police investigations have been released wtihout charge, police added.
 
“At any one time MI5 and police are conducting around 500 active investigations, involving 3,000 subjects of interest,” Rowley said. “Additionally, there are around 20,000 individuals who are former subjects of interest, whose risk remains subject to review by MI5 and its partners.”
 
Calls for May to resign ahead of elections
 
The latest attack comes against the backdrop of parliamentary elections slated for Thursday. Prime Minister Theresa May has come under fire from her chief political opponent and some in the media for cuts she made to the police force during her time as home secretary, the British equivalent of interior minister.
 
Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn voiced support for those calling on May to resign because of her role in reducing police staffing, but he said the best remedy was to vote her out.