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Choudary charged for supporting ISIS

Choudary charged for supporting ISIS

August 05, 2015 | 10:48 PM
Anjem Choudary speaks during a rally calling for Muslims to refrain from voting in the 2015 general election outside the Regents Park mosque in London

Evening Standard/LondonRadical preacher Anjem Choudary and one of his followers have been charged with inviting support for ISIS, it was confirmed yesterday.The alleged calls for support for the banned group were said to come through lectures posted online, the Crown Prosecution Service said.Both are set to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court yesterday afternoon.Choudary, 48, of Hampton Road, Ilford, is charged with having “invited support for a proscribed terrorist organisation, namely ISIL, also known as ISIS or the Islamic State, contrary to section 12 Terrorism Act 2000”, Scotland Yard said.One of the firebrand cleric’s students, Mohamed Mizanur Rahman, 32, of Sidney Street, Whitechapel, faces the same charge.The Metropolitan Police added both were detained in custody ahead of their 2pm court appearance.Choudary and Rahman were arrested on September 24 last year by the Met’s counter terror command on suspicion of being members of the proscribed organisation.Sue Hemming, the CPS’s head of special crime and counter terrorism, said: “Following an investigation by the Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terrorism Command, we have today authorised charges against Anjem Choudary and Mohammed Mizanur Rahman.“We have concluded that there is sufficient evidence and it is in the public interest to prosecute Anjem Choudary and Mohamed Rahman for inviting support for ISIL, a proscribed terrorist organisation, between 29 June 2014 and 6 March this year. Each man is charged with one offence contrary to section 12 of the Terrorism Act 2000.“It is alleged that Anjem Choudary and Mohammed Rahman invited support for ISIS in individual lectures which were subsequently published online.” Scotland Yard has spent at least £1mn policing rallies led by Islamist hate preacher Anjem Choudary since last year.Figures passed to the Standard show the force has spent £261,746 since January 2014 on demonstrations outside Regent’s Park Mosque.Just one protest near its gates — where Choudary has led a number of rallies — cost £84,401 to police.He has also led rallies outside embassies in the capital.London assembly member Murad Qureshi, who lives near the mosque, requested the figures from mayor Boris Johnson, and said the cost was one reason why some demonstrations should be banned, particularly on important days of worship.He said: “They are astonishing amounts and it highlights the cost both to the Met and local communities. I think some of these rallies should have been stopped before they went ahead. The Met should do this.“There is no doubt the cost in policing him [Choudary] London-wide is almost certainly £1mn. I suggest next time they also pick up the bill if they want to demonstrate so eagerly.“This is the cost of one man’s right to protest which I think the Met has interpreted to the extreme. I don’t want to get in the way of people’s democratic right to protest, but he’s abusing it.”A breakdown of the £261,746 spent shows £156,260 was the “estimated” cost of officers being assigned to rallies rather than carrying out other duties, while £105,486 was on overtime and equipment.On the one protest costing an estimated £84,401, on Good Friday last year, it was £38,584 and £45,817 respectively.On Good Friday this year, Choudary led a rally outside the mosque to promote his “Stay Muslim, Don’t Vote” campaign along with two other radical preachers, Mizanur Rahman and Trevor Brooks.The protest led to clashes with far-Right groups the English Defence League and Britain First.Choudary said: “The police come down for the protection  of the far-Right groups, it’s clearly not for our protection. If they are shouting obscenities, then you can guess what would happen without police protection.”A Scotland Yard spokesman said: “We are mindful of the passionate response that can be stirred when those with conflicting views come together in the same area to protest, or when protests  are held at religious or culturally significant sites.”He added: “Police do not have the legal power to ban a static protest.”

August 05, 2015 | 10:48 PM