The
prime minister has defended the security services amid criticisms they failed
to stop Mohammed Emwazi, known as “Jihadi John'”, from joining Islamic State in
Syria.
David
Cameron said the security services made “incredibly difficult judgements” on
the UK’s behalf.
His
comments came after it emerged Emwazi was known to authorities.
The
PM said he would not comment on specific cases but urged the public to back the
security services.
The
masked Islamic State militant known as “Jihadi John”, who has been pictured in
the videos of the beheadings of Western hostages, was identified this week as a
Kuwaiti-born British man, in his mid-20s and from west London.
Emwazi
first appeared in a video last August, when he apparently killed the US
journalist James Foley.
He
was later thought to have been pictured in the videos of the beheadings of
British aid worker David Haines, US journalist Steven Sotloff, British taxi
driver Alan Henning, and American aid worker Peter Kassig.
BBC
security correspondent Frank Gardner said MI5 is coming under pressure to
explain why its officers spent five years talking to Emwazi before he left the
country for Syria.
He
said: “I think they’ve certainly got a case to answer here and I’d be very
surprised if parliament’s intelligence and security committee doesn’t announce
some kind of inquiry to see whether there were any mistakes made.”
The
BBC has seen the first official document showing contact between Emwazi and the
police.
A
letter from the Metropolitan police reveals that officers had a meeting with
him in July 2010 to address his “concerns” which are thought to relate to an
alleged assault by a police officer at Heathrow Airport.
UK-based
advocacy group Cage has suggested that MI5 may have contributed to the
radicalisation of Emwazi.
Downing
Street said that suggestion was “completely reprehensible”, while London mayor
Boris Johnson described Cage’s comments as “an apology for terror”.
Mr
Cameron has defended the UK’s security services, praising the work of “these
extraordinary men and women”.
He
said: “All of the time, they are having to make incredibly difficult judgements
and I think basically they make very good judgements on our behalf, and I think
whilst we are in the middle of this vast effort to make sure British citizens
are safe, the most important thing is to get behind them.”
Mr
Cameron went on to say the security services’ “dedication and work has saved us
from plots on the streets of the UK that could have done us immense damage”
within the last few months.
Mr
Johnson said it did renew the argument about control orders – a form of house
arrest for terrorist suspects – which were abolished by the coalition
government in 2012 and replaced with Terrorism Prevention and Investigation
Measures (TPims).
“It
is vital when you are controlling these people to be able to relocate them, to
take them away from their support networks and to monitor them properly,” he
said.
“The
politicians who made that mistake need to think very carefully about why they
did it and I think the benefit of the doubt was given too much to those who
wish us serious harm.”
David
Anderson, the government’s independent reviewer of terror legislation, said it
was difficult not to have sympathy with the security services “when you see
just how many cases they have to look at”.
“A
lot of people talk a good game when it comes to terrorism. The knack is
identifying the few who are going to do something about it.”
Emwazi
has appeared in videos dressed in a black robe with a black balaclava covering
all but his eyes and top of his nose.
Speaking
with a British accent, he taunted Western powers before holding his knife to
the hostages’ necks, appearing to start cutting before the film stopped. The
victims’ decapitated bodies were then shown.
Earlier
this month, a video in which the Japanese journalist Kenji Goto appeared to be
beheaded featured the militant.
Hostages
released by IS said he was one of three British jihadists guarding Westerners
abducted by the group in Syria.
Families
have given mixed reactions to the militant being named, with the mother of Mr
Foley saying she forgave Emwazi; while Mr Haines’s daughter, Bethany, said she
wanted to see “a bullet between his eyes”.
Emwazi
is believed to have travelled to Syria around 2013 and later joined IS, which
has declared the creation of a “caliphate” in the large swathes of Syria and
neighbouring Iraq it controls.
British
police have not commented on the identity of the militant known as “Jihadi
John”, citing ongoing inquiries.
(BBC)
‘Jihadi John': British P.M defends security services
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Friday, February 27, 2015
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