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Abu Hamza "secretly worked with MI5"
#1
I'm posting this for two reasons really. Firstly, for a long time I have assumed Hamza was MI5 because he was an untouchable. But the second reason is my curiosity over the quotation marked caption "secretly worked with MI5 to keep streets of London safe" - where the secret tag wasn't once repeated in the body of the story. So where did the quote come from and what's the real story here?

I also wonder why the judge won't let the Scotland yard evidence to be submitted?

Quote:Abu Hamza trial: Imam secretly worked with MI5 to keep streets of London safe'

[Image: pg-10-hamza-pa.jpg]

Preacher's lawyers signal intention to use Scotland Yard documents as part of defence case

DAVID USBORNE [Image: plus.png]
US EDITOR

Wednesday 07 May 2014

Speaking quietly into the microphone on the witness stand, Abu Hamza, the former imam of Finsbury Park mosque in London, repeated 12 times "no" to the charges at the heart of his terror trial in New York. Had he committed the crimes he is charged with by the American government, he was asked. "No," he replied each time. And once: "Never."

The dramatic turn in the trial came moments after the defence opened its case. His testimony is expected to last into next week. The defence is expected to bring only one other witness.
Abu Hamza, 56, with a thick white beard and shock of white hair, was firm and clear in stating his denials as each of the main charges was put to him. Among the most important: had he conspired to plan the kidnapping of tourists in Yemen at the end of 1998? Had he sent prospective fighters for al-Qa'ida to Bly, in Oregon, for training purposes? Had he provided any kind of material support to the Taliban in Afghanistan? A motion by the defence for an acquittal, lodged the instant that the prosecution had rested, was rejected by trial judge Katherine Forrest.
The trial began in mid-April following Abu Hamza's extradition from Britain, where he had already served six years for terror-related charges.
On the stand, Abu Hamza was taken by the defence through his early years in the UK after moving there from his native Alexandria in Egypt. "I wanted to see the world," he said. Alexandria had been very "pro-Western and he had been looking forward to the "Western life, American-style".
He spoke in what sounded like almost affectionate terms of studying engineering in Brighton and at Brunel University, becoming a member of the Royal Society of Engineers and eventually working at Sandhurst, overseeing the construction of several buildings such as a car park and a petrol station.
At one moment the judge asked the defendant to clarify if he understood the concept of telling the truth. "I gave you my oath. I am no stranger to prison. If my freedom comes at the expense of my dignity and belief, then I don't want it," he said.
Earlier in the day, his defence team told the judge, not in the presence of the jury, that during the time covered by the charges he had been in close contact with British security services, offering information and guidance in an effort to "keep the streets of London safe", his defence contended.
His lawyers said they intended to make use of 50 pages of documents provided by Scotland Yard that would back up the claim that he had been of vital assistance in London to keep his followers calm during periods of particular tension in the late 1990s and into 2000.
The judge ruled she would not allow the defence to use the Scotland Yard documents. But Abu Hamza's team was expected to appeal today.
The circumstances of repeated conversations with MI5 and Scotland Yard would be the "theme of our defence," Joshua Dratel, for Abu Hamza, told the judge. "He was an intermediary… with respect to cooling heads in the community, with respect to maintaining order in the community."
Abu Hamza denies all the charges. The case continues.



The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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#2
I've been saying this for years and nobody would believe me. The home he lived in was also paid for and provided by MI5. This is all described in Nafeez Ahmed's book.

Abu Hamza was also used as a tool to ferment public opinion against the "bloody Muslims". During the time he was constantly in the news, people would constantly associate Muslims with Abu Hamza "The evil looking guy with a hook for a hand" and Finsbury park mosque

He also worked as a manager in a strip club in Soho and as a bouncer.

You'll find that most of these "radical Islamists" are actually on the payroll of the MI5, CIA or whoever. Anjem Choudary, Boko Haram, Al Zawahiri, etc the list goes on. The public are being duped in a PR war.
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#3
Danny Jarman Wrote:You'll find that most of these "radical Islamists" are actually on the payroll of the MI5, CIA or whoever. Anjem Choudary, Boko Haram, Al Zawahiri, etc the list goes on. The public are being duped in a PR war.

I agree Danny. That also is my working hypothesis.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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