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Terror suspect evades British police by donning burqa

Published: 05 Nov 2013 - 04:02 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 11:28 pm


A combination of handout still images from CCTV footage obtained in London from Britain’s Metropolitan Police shows (left) Somali-born terror suspect Mohammed Ahmed Mohammed entering a mosque wearing Western-style clothes, and (centre and right) later leaving, disguised as a woman, with his face and body fully covered by a burqa.

LONDON: The British government defended its terror prevention measures yesterday after a Somali-born suspect escaped surveillance by putting on a burqa during a visit to a mosque.

Mohammed Ahmed Mohammed, 27, who was subject to an order restricting his movements, entered a mosque in London on Friday wearing Western-style clothes but CCTV images showed him leaving disguised as a woman, with his face and body fully covered.

He is understood to have received training and fought overseas for the Somalia-based Shabab, the Al Qaeda-linked militants who launched the attack on a Nairobi shopping mall in September in which at least 67 people were killed.

Home Secretary Theresa May, the interior minister, said that the suspect did not pose a “direct threat” to Britain.

“The police and Security Service have confirmed that they do not believe that this man poses a direct threat to the public in the UK.

“The reason he was put on a TPIM in the first place was to prevent his travel to support terrorism overseas,” she said in a statement to parliament.

Mohammed is under a Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures (TPIM) notice, which was imposed primarily to prevent overseas travel. 

He is the second person to such an order since Prime Minister David Cameron’s government introduced them to replace control orders in early 2012. They allow suspects to live in public but under stringent restrictions. 

Another suspect, Ibrahim Magag, tore off his electronic tag and vanished in a taxi last December. He has not been seen since. 

A spokesman for Cameron said that the government would “look at whether there are lessons that can be learned” following the latest disappearance. 

Yvette Cooper, home affairs spokeswoman for the main opposition Labour party, described the situation as “extremely serious” and demanded answers from the government on how Mohammed was able to abscond.

“The home secretary also needs to provide information about the decisions made over Mohammed’s TPIM, how he was able to abscond and what the risks to the public are,” she said. 

It is believed Mohamed attended a training camp in 2008 and is understood to have helped people travel to Britain from Somalia to allow them to engage in terror-related activity.AFP