Militants in Europe Openly Call for Jihad and the Rule of Islam
By PATRICK E. TYLER - and DON VAN NATTA Jr.
New York Times - Published: April 26, 2004
UTON, England, April 24 The call to jihad is rising in the streets of Europe, and
is being answered, counterterrorism officials say.
In this former industrial town north of London, a small group of young Britons whose
parents emigrated from Pakistan after World War II have turned against their families' new
home. They say they would like to see Prime Minister Tony Blair dead or deposed and an
Islamic flag hanging outside No. 10 Downing Street.
They swear allegiance to Osama bin Laden and his goal of toppling Western democracies to
establish an Islamic superstate under Shariah law, like Afghanistan under the Taliban.
They call the Sept. 11 hijackers the "Magnificent 19" and regard the Madrid
train bombings as a clever way to drive a wedge into Europe.
On Thursday evening, at a tennis center community hall in Slough, west of London, their
leader, Sheik Omar Bakri Mohammad, spoke of his adherence to Osama bin Laden. If Europe
fails to heed Mr. bin Laden's offer of a truce provided that all foreign troops are
withdrawn from Iraq in three months Muslims will no longer be restrained from
attacking the Western countries that play host to them, the sheik said.
"All Muslims of the West will be obliged," he said, to "become his
sword" in a new battle. Europeans take heed, he added, saying, "It is foolish to
fight people who want death that is what they are looking for."
On working-class streets of old industrial towns like Crawley, Luton, Birmingham and
Manchester, and in the Arab enclaves of Germany, France, Switzerland and other parts of
Europe, intelligence officials say a fervor for militancy is intensifying and becoming
more open.
In Hamburg, Dr. Mustafa Yoldas, the director of the Council of Islamic Communities, saw a
correlation to the discord in Iraq. "This is a very dangerous situation at the
moment," Dr. Yoldas said. "My impression is that Muslims have become more and
more angry against the United States."
Hundreds of young Muslim men are answering the call of militant groups affiliated or
aligned with Al Qaeda, intelligence and counterterrorism officials in the region say.
Even more worrying, said a senior counterterrorism official, is that the level of
"chatter" communications among people suspected of terrorism and their
supporters has markedly increased since Mr. bin Laden's warning to Europe this
month. The spike in chatter has given rise to acute worries that planning for another
strike in Europe is advanced.
"Iraq dramatically strengthened their recruitment efforts," one counterterrorism
official said. He added that some mosques now display photos of American soldiers fighting
in Iraq alongside bloody scenes of bombed out Iraqi neighborhoods. Detecting actual
recruitments is almost impossible, he said, because it is typically done face to face.
And recruitment is paired with a compelling new strategy to bring the fight to Europe.
Members of Al Qaeda have "proven themselves to be extremely opportunistic, and they
have decided to try to split the Western alliance," the official continued.
"They are focusing their energies on attacking the big countries" the
United States, Britain and Spain so as to "scare" the smaller states.
Some Muslim recruits are going to Iraq, counterterrorism officials in Europe say, but more
are remaining home, possibly joining cells that could help with terror logistics or begin
operations like the one that came to notice when the British police seized 1,200 pounds of
ammonium nitrate, a key bomb ingredient, in late March, and arrested nine
Pakistani-Britons, five of whom have been charged with trying to build a terrorist bomb.
Stoking that anger are some of the same fiery Islamic clerics who preached violence and
martyrdom before the Sept. 11 attacks.
On Friday, Abu Hamza, the cleric accused of tutoring Richard Reid before he tried to blow
up a Paris-to-Miami jetliner with explosives hidden in his shoe, urged a crowd of 200
outside his former Finsbury Park mosque to embrace death and the "culture of
martyrdom."
Though the British home secretary, David Blunkett, has sought to strip Abu Hamza of his
British citizenship and deport him, the legal battle has dragged on for years while Abu
Hamza keeps calling down the wrath of God.
Also this week, over Mr. Blunkett's vigorous objection, a 35-year-old Algerian held under
emergency laws passed after Sept. 11 was released from Belmarsh Prison. The man,
identified only as "G," suffered from severe mental illness, his lawyers told a
special immigration appeals panel, which let him out of prison and put him under house
arrest.
Mr. Blunkett insisted that that should not be the final judgment on a man already found by
one court "to be a threat to life and liberty."
In an interview on the BBC over the weekend, Mr. Blunkett advocated a stronger deportation
policy, initially focused on 12 foreign terror suspects held without charge since the
Sept. 11 attacks.
Despite tougher antiterrorism laws, the police, prosecutors and intelligence chiefs across
Europe say they are struggling to contain the openly seditious speech of Islamic
extremists, some of whom, they say, have been inciting young men to suicidal violence
since the 1990's.
One chapter in Sheik Omar's lectures these days is "The Psyche of Muslims for Suicide
Bombing."
The authorities say that laws to protect religious expression and civil liberties have the
result of limiting what they can do to stop hateful speech. In the case of foreigners,
they say they are often left to seek deportation, a lengthy and uncertain process subject
to legal appeals, when the suspect can keep inciting attacks.
That leaves the authorities to resort to less effective means, such as mouse-trapping
Islamic radicals with immigration violations in hopes of making a deportation case stick.
"In many countries, the laws are liberal and it's not easy," an official said.
At a mosque in Geneva, an imam recently exhorted his followers to "impose the will of
Islam on the godless society of the West."
"It was quite virulent," said a senior official with knowledge of the sermon.
"The imam was encouraging his followers to take over the godless society."
While such a sermon may be incitement, recruitment takes a more shadowy course, and is
hard to detect, a senior antiterrorism official said. "Believers are appealed to in
the mosques, but the real conversations take place in restaurants or cafes or private
apartments," the official said.
While some clerics, like Abu Qatada said to be the spiritual counselor of Mohamed
Atta, who led the Sept. 11 hijacking team remain in prison in Britain without
charge, others like Sheik Omar, leader of a movement called Al Muhajiroun, carry on a
robust ideological campaign.
"There is no case against me," Sheik Omar said in an interview. Referring to
calls by members of Parliament that he be deported, he added, "but they are
Jewish" and "they have been calling for that for years."
Among his ardent followers is Ishtiaq Alamgir, 24, who heads Al Muhajiroun in Luton and
calls himself Sayful Islam, the sword of Islam. He says there are about 50 members here
but exact numbers are secret.
Most days, he and a handful of his followers run a recruitment stand on Dunstable Road
much to the chagrin of the Muslim elders of Luton.
Mainstream Muslims are outraged by the situation, saying the actions of a few are causing
their communities to be singled out for surveillance and making the larger population
distrustful of them.
Muhammad Sulaiman, a stalwart of the mainstream Central Mosque here, was penniless when he
arrived from the Kashmiri frontier of Pakistan in 1956. He raised money to build the
Central Mosque here and now leads a campaign to ban Al Muhajiroun radicals from the city's
10 mosques.
"This is show-off business," he says in accented English. "I don't want
these kids in my mosque."
Other community leaders look to the government to do something, if only to help prevent
the demonization of British Muslims, or "Islamophobia," as some here call it.
"I think these kids are being brainwashed by a few radical clerics," said Akhbar
Dad Khan, another elder of the Central Mosque. He wants them prosecuted or deported.
"We should be able to control this negativity," he said.
In Slough, Sheik Omar spent much of his time Thursday night regaling his young followers
with the erotic delights of paradise sweet kisses and the pleasures of bathing with
scores of women while he also preached the virtues of death in Islamic struggle as
a ticket to paradise.
He spoke of terrorism as the new norm of cultural conflict, "the fashion of the 21st
century," practiced as much by Tony Blair as by Al Qaeda.
"We may be caught up in the target as the people of Manhattan were," he told
them.
And he warned Western leaders, "You may kill bin Laden, but the phenomenon, you
cannot kill it you cannot destroy it."
"Our Muslim brothers from abroad will come one day and conquer here and then we will
live under Islam in dignity," he said.
***Patrick E. Tyler reported from Luton, Slough and London and Don Van Natta Jr. from
London. Souad Mekhennet contributed reporting from Germany.