Saturday, August 30, 2014

UK accused of harbouring Libyan cleric who helped aid Islamist insurgency

WOW!!! The UK truly is FUBAR!!

UK accused of harbouring Libyan cleric who helped aid Islamist insurgency

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/aug/29/uk-accused-libyan-grand-mufti-sadik-al-ghariani

Grand mufti Sheikh Sadik Al-Ghariani faces possible war crimes charges for urging followers to overthrow Libyan government
Sheikh Sadik Al-Ghariani
Sheikh Sadik Al-Ghariani celebrated the violent capture of Tripoli by Islamist militia force Libya Dawn using an online TV channel. Photograph: Mahmud Turkia/AFP/Getty Images
 
Britain has been accused of housing a possible war crimes suspect after the Guardian learned that Libya's highest spiritual leader, the grand mufti Sheikh Sadik Al-Ghariani, helped orchestrate the Islamist takeover of Tripoli from the UK.

On a day when David Cameron announced tougher measures to tackle the threat from terrorists, the Foreign Office confirmed that Ghariani was residing in the UK, from where he is encouraging his followers to overthrow the Libyan government.

Earlier this week, the radical cleric celebrated the violent capture of Tripoli by Islamist militia force Libya Dawn and called for a widening of the rebellion using an online television channel registered by a close family relative in Exeter.

The day after Tripoli fell to the Islamist group Libya Dawn, Ghariani sent congratulations to the Islamist militants using his internet channel, Tanasuh: "I congratulate the revolutionaries in their victory, I give blessing to the martyrs," he said.

Ghariani's presence in Britain will prove acutely embarrassing for the government, emerging on the day the prime minister warned of a "greater and deeper threat to our security than we have known before" from Islamist extremists as the security threat level was raised from substantial to severe.
The matter is also likely to strain relations with Washington. American officials are understood to be furious that he has been allowed a pulpit to preach in the UK, particularly following his praise in June of the militant group Ansar Sharia, which the US blames for the killing of its ambassador Chris Stevens in Bengazi in 2012.

Fighting in Tripoli  
Smoke fills the sky over Tripoli: rival militias have been fighting since mid-July in the capital for control of the city's main airport. Photograph: EPA 
  Ghariani is also facing a potential war crimes investigation after the UN security council this week issued a sharply worded resolution demanding a ceasefire and threatening indictments for those inciting the militancy.

Libya is enduring its worst violence since the 2011 overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi, after Libya Dawn, an alliance of Islamist forces, swept into the capital last week, burning homes and arresting opponents as the government fled to eastern parts of the country.

The shadow immigration minister, David Hanson, said: "The home secretary has serious questions to answer about whether someone whom it is alleged has breached a UN war crime resolution is resident in this country, and how the Home Office has decided that his presence here will be beneficial to the UK."

Hanson said Ghariani's time in Britain was a further illustration of the Home Office failing to share intelligence with the Foreign Office and MI5. He added: "Instead, there are very serious allegations about someone that has been given permission to enter the country and the home secretary needs to explain how he was able to travel here and continue to seemingly instigate action in Tripoli."
Ghariani's broadcasts are delivered to his supporters through an Arabic-language website set up by a close relative, Sohayl Elgariani, at a rundown block of private flats in Exeter, next to a tanning salon and a short walk from Exeter City's football stadium St James Park. Elgariani failed to return requests for comment.

In a sermon earlier this week, the radical cleric called for a widening of the violent insurrection in Libya, encouraging "revolutionaries" to target Bayda, the home of the government, and Tobruk, where parliament has fled to. "I call on cities like Tobruk and Bayda who did amazing work in the revolution … to join their brother revolutionaries in Libya so that they have one united way," he said.
In a direct threat to the west not to intervene in the latest outbreak of violence, Ghariani appeared to refer to the UK, France and the US – leaders in Nato's 2011 intervention in the Libyan revolution – when he said: "The countries that helped the revolution of 17 February … your gamble must be with the people, not with the rulers."

Libya's prime minister, Abdulah al-Thinni, this week railed against the broadcast, accusing the grand mufti of issuing "false fatwas", and urged parliament to sack Ghariani from his quasijudicial post.
Since being appointed two years ago, the mufti has often courted controversy, siding with radical Islamist factions and issuing fatwas including banning Libyan women from marrying foreigners and stopping the import of lingerie.

"The mufti has always been a disruptive element," said Hassan el-Emin, a former Libyan politician who fled to Britain after receiving militia death threats. "This guy has been here in Britain inciting this kind of stuff."

A Foreign Office spokesman confirmed that Ghariani was in the UK: "He wasn't invited by us. Our understanding is it's a private visit."

The Home Office said: "We do not routinely comment on individual cases. But we are clear that those who seek to foster hatred or promote terrorism are not welcome in the United Kingdom. We will take action against those who represent to our society or seek to subvert our shared values. All cases are kept under review."

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