Focus on early release of terror convict in London stabbings
Usman Khan was convicted on terrorism charges but
let out of prison early. He attended a “Learning Together” conference for
ex-offenders, and used the event to launch a bloody attack, stabbing two people
to death and wounding three others.
Police shot him dead after he flashed what seemed to
be a suicide vest. Khan is gone, but the questions remain: Why was he let out
early? Did authorities believe he no longer believed in radical Islam? Why
didn’t the conditions imposed on his release prevent the carnage?
Britons looked for answers Saturday as national
politicians sought to pin the blame elsewhere for what was obviously a
breakdown in the security system, which had kept London largely free of
extremist violence for more than two years.
Police said Khan was convicted in 2012 of terrorism
offenses and released in December 2018 “on license,” which means he had to meet
certain conditions or face recall to prison. Several British media outlets
reported that he was wearing an electronic ankle bracelet that allowed police
to track his movements at the time of the attack.
Authorities seemed quick to blame “the system”
rather than any one component.
The Parole Board said it had played no role in
Khan’s early release. It said the convict “appears to have been released
automatically on license (as required by law), without ever being referred to
the board.”
Neil Basu, the Metropolitan Police counterterrorism
police, said Saturday afternoon that the conditions of Khan’s release had been
complied with. He didn’t spell out what those conditions were or why they
failed to prevent him from killing two people.
The automatic release program apparently means no
agency was given the task of determining if Khan still believed in radical
views he had embraced when he was first imprisoned for plotting to attack a
number of sites and individuals in London.
It is not yet known whether he took part in any of
the “de-radicalization” programs used by British authorities to try and reform
known jihadis.
The former head of Britain’s National Counter
Terrorism Security Office, Chris Phillips, said it is unreasonable to ask
police and security services to keep the country safe while at the same time
letting people out of prison when they are still a threat.
“We’re playing Russian roulette with people’s lives,
letting convicted, known, radicalized jihadi criminals walk about our streets,”
he said.
Khan had been convicted as part of an al-Qaida
linked group that was accused of plotting to target major sites including
Parliament, the U.S. Embassy and individuals including Prime Minister Boris
Johnson, then the mayor of London, the dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London
and two rabbis.
Khan admitted to a lesser charge of engaging in
conduct for the preparation of acts of terrorism. He had been secretly taped
plotting attacks and talking about martyrdom as a possibility.
Khan and his accomplices had links to radical
preacher Anjem Choudary, one of the highest-profile faces of radical Islam in
Britain. A mobile phone seized at the time contained material related to a
banned group that Choudary founded. The preacher was released from prison in
2018 but is under heavy surveillance and a curfew.
Several people who attended Choudary’s rallies when
he was under no controls have been convicted of attacks, including the two
al-Qaida-inspired killers who ran over British soldier Lee Rigby and stabbed
him to death in 2013.
The two chief contenders in the Dec. 12 election —
Johnson and Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn — condemned the system Saturday.
Johnson, who visited the scene Saturday, said he had
“long argued” that it was a “mistake to allow serious and violent criminals to
come out of prison early.” He said the criminal justice system “simply isn’t
working.”
Johnson spoke Saturday with U.S. President Donald
Trump, who offered his condolences following the attack, according to White
House spokesman Judd Deere.
Corbyn said it is not clear if the Probation Office
was involved at all and questioned whether the Parole Board should have been
given a role.
“We have to ensure that the public are safe,” he
said. “That means supervision of prisoners in prison but it also means
supervision of ex-prisoners when they are released ahead of the completion of
their sentence, to have tough supervision of them to make sure this kind of
danger is not played out on the public in the future.”
He stopped short of blaming Johnson, who was not in
office when Khan was set free.
Police said 28-year-old Khan was attending a program
that works to educate prisoners when he launched Friday’s attack just yards
from the site of a deadly 2017 van and knife rampage.
Basu, the top counterterrorism police officer, said
the suspect appeared to be wearing a bomb vest but it turned out to be “a hoax
explosive device.” He said police believe Khan was acting alone.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for
the attack, saying Khan was one of its fighters. The group’s statement,
however, didn’t provide any evidence.
One of the victims was named in British media
reports as Jack Merritt, a graduate of Cambridge University who was helping
organize the conference where the attack began. His father David Merritt
tweeted that his son had been killed and had a “beautiful spirit.”
Basu said he could not name the victims until they
had been formally identified by the coroner. He asked the public for help with
video, photos and information about the attack.
Health officials said two of the wounded were stable
and the third had less serious injuries. A victim who had been in critical
condition has improved and is now listed as stable, officials said.
Police on Saturday were searching an apartment block
in Stafford, 150 miles (240 kilometers) northwest of London, for clues. Khan
was believed to have lived in the area after his release from prison. Police
also conducted searches in Stoke-on-Trent.
Learning Together, a Cambridge University-backed
prison education program, was holding a conference at the hall when the attack
started.
Footage from the attack showed several passers-by —
including one armed with a narwhal tusk apparently taken from the hall and
another with a fire extinguisher — fighting with the suspect before police
arrived.
Queen Elizabeth II said in a statement that she and
her husband, Prince Philip, were sending their thoughts to everyone affected by
the “terrible violence.” She thanked police and emergency services “as well as
the brave individuals who put their own lives at risk to selflessly help and
protect others.”