TIMESONLINE.co.uk
March 25, 2004
ONE of al-Qaeda’s
most dangerous figures has been revealed as a double agent
working for MI5, raising criticism from European
governments, which repeatedly called for his arrest.
Britain ignored
warnings — which began before the September 11 attacks —
from half a dozen friendly governments about Abu Qatada’s
links with terrorist groups and refused to arrest him.
Intelligence chiefs hid from European allies their intention
to use the cleric as a key informer against Islamic
militants in Britain.
Abu Qatada boasted
to MI5 that he could prevent terrorist attacks and offered
to expose dangerous extremists, while all along he was
setting up a haven for his terror organisation in Britain.
Among the scores of
young militants who came to visit him in London was the
chief suspect in the Madrid train bombings. His followers
also included people who wanted to be suicide bombers for
al-Qaeda, such as Richard Reid, the shoe bomber.
A special tribunal
that has investigated his operations in Britain described
him as “a truly dangerous individual”. A ruling by the
Special Immigrations Appeals Commission revealed yesterday
that there was evidence to show that Abu Qatada “has been
concerned in the instigation of acts of international
terrorism”.
A security source
in Madrid said yesterday: “Who knows how much violence and
bloodshed could have been prevented if Britain had heeded
the warnings about this man a long time ago.”
With terrorism at
the top of the agenda at the European Union summit today in
Brussels, Tony Blair is bound to be asked about MI5’s
history with Abu Qatada and other militant clerics who have
used Britain as their base.
Spain, France,
Italy, Germany, the United States and Jordan all asked to
question Abu Qatada about his links to al-Qaeda but were
refused.
Instead, MI5 agents
held three meetings with the cleric, who bragged of his
influence among young Islamic militants and insisted that
they were no risk to Britain’s national security.
He pledged to MI5
that he would not “bite the hand that fed him”.
He also promised to
“report anyone damaging the interests of this country”.
Instead, he was recruiting for al-Qaeda training camps.
His continued
liberty for years after international demands for his arrest
was an embarrassment for Britain. When David Blunkett
introduced his controversial Anti-terrorism Crime and
Security Act, 2001, which allowed him to detain foreign
suspects without trial, Abu Qatada claimed that the law “was
enacted with him particularly in mind”.
He disappeared from
his family home in West London just before the law came into
force.
Indignant French
officials accused MI5 of helping the cleric to abscond.
While he remained on the run, one intelligence chief in
Paris was quoted as saying: “British intelligence is saying
they have no idea where he is, but we know where he is and,
if we know, I’m quite sure they do.”
Almost a year later
Abu Qatada was found hiding in a flat not far from Scotland
Yard.
Abu Qatada was
appealing against his continued detention in Belmarsh top
security prison, but Mr Justice Collins ruled that the
cleric was “at the centre in the UK of terrorist activities
associated with al-Qaeda”.
He is a Jordanian
national who arrived here with a forged United Arab Emirates
passport in September 1993 claiming asylum.
Jordan told Britain
that he had been convicted for terrorist attacks in Amman
seven months before September 11.
Spanish
investigators produced evidence that a militant they had in
custody in Madrid — Abu Dahdah — had visited the cleric more
than 25 times, bringing him money and new recruits.
Abu Qatada was
banned by most mainstream mosques, so held his own meetings
at the Four Feathers Club, near Baker Street in Central
London. His lawyer says that he “entirely denies” any
involvement with terrorism.