海角直播

London attacker not on Saudi security radar, says Saudi embassy

London attacker not on Saudi security radar, says Saudi embassy
A handout photograph released by the Metropolitan Police shows a mugshot of Khalid Masood. (REUTERS/Metropolitan Police/Handout)
Updated 25 March 2017

London attacker not on Saudi security radar, says Saudi embassy

London attacker not on Saudi security radar, says Saudi embassy

LONDON: The man who killed four people near Britain鈥檚 Houses of Parliament on Wednesday had spent time working in 海角直播 but did not have a criminal record there or attract the attention of the security services, the Saudi Embassy in London said on Friday.
Khalid Masood had been in the kingdom for two one-year periods, from November 2005 and April 2008, when he worked as an English teacher, and also visited briefly in March 2015.
鈥淒uring his time in 海角直播, Khalid Masood did not appear on the security services鈥 radar and does not have a criminal record in the Kingdom of 海角直播,鈥 the embassy said in a statement on its Twitter account.
The embassy said King Salman had spoken to Prime Minister Theresa May to express his condolences over Wednesday鈥檚 attack, adding: 鈥淎t such a time, our ongoing security cooperation is most crucial to the defeat of terrorism and the saving of innocent lives.鈥
Masood was shot by police on Wednesday after a rampage through Westminster.
At least 50 people from 12 different countries were injured when Masood ploughed his rented car into crowds of people walking along the pavement on Westminster Bridge, before crashing the vehicle into the fence outside parliament.
Three people on the bridge died after being hit by the speeding car, then the attacker leapt out and fatally stabbed a police officer just inside the gates of the Houses of Parliament before being shot dead.

History of violence
Police said the 52-year-old Briton was found to have a history of violent offenses but no terrorist convictions.
A passport-style photo of Masood, released by police, shows a black man with a shaved head and a beard. He also used the names Adrian Elms and Adrian Russell Ajao among other aliases.
Long before his short stints in jail turned into years behind bars, Masood was known as Adrian Elms, with a reputation for drinking and an unpredictable temper.
At least twice he was convicted of violent crimes, well before he stabbed a police officer to death Wednesday in London with a motion that one horrified witness described as 鈥減laying a drum on your back with two knives.鈥
Masood, who at 52 is considerably older than most extremists who carry out bloodshed in the West, had an arrest record dating to 1983. The violence came later, first in 2000 when he slashed a man across the face in a pub parking lot in a racially charged argument after drinking four pints, according to a newspaper account.
The victim, Piers Mott, was scarred for life, said his widow, Heather.
Masood鈥檚 last conviction was in 2003, also involving a knife attack. It鈥檚 not clear when he took the name Masood, suggesting a conversion to Islam.
Heather Mott said Masood appeared to come out of jail 鈥渆ven worse.鈥 She said she got chills when she learned the identity of the London attacker.
鈥淲hat a pity they didn鈥檛 realize he was a nutter,鈥 she said.

Search for clues
Police are combing through 鈥渕assive amounts of computer data鈥 and have contacted 3,500 witnesses as they look for clues as to why the British-born man launched the deadly attack.
鈥淐learly that鈥檚 a main line of our investigation is what led him to be radicalized: Was it through influences in our community, influences from overseas or through online propaganda? Our investigations and our arrests will help in that, but the public appeal will make a big difference if people come forward with more information,鈥 said Britain鈥檚 top counterterrorism officer, Mark Rowley.
Prime Minister Theresa May said Masood was 鈥渋nvestigated in relation to concerns about violent extremism鈥 years ago. But she called him 鈥渁 peripheral figure.鈥
The Daesh group described Masood as 鈥渁 soldier,鈥 claiming responsibility for the attack. Rowley said police are investigating whether he 鈥渁cted totally alone inspired by terrorist propaganda, or if others have encouraged, supported or directed him.鈥
People made arrests across the country as they investigate whether anyone else helped Masood prepare his attack. Six people were released without charge Friday night, leaving four in custody on suspicion of preparing terrorist acts.
Detectives have searched 21 properties in London, Brighton, Wales, Manchester and the central English city of Birmingham in one of Britain鈥檚 biggest counterterrorism operations in years. Wednesday鈥檚 attack was the deadliest in Britain since suicide bombers killed 52 commuters on London鈥檚 transit system on July 7, 2005.

Jolly before the attack
Once Masood鈥檚 identity became known, police and the media began tracing his final hours.
The manager of the Preston Park Hotel in the beachside city of Brighton where Masood stayed the night before the attack said he seemed unusually outgoing and mentioned details about his family, including having a sick father.
鈥淗e was normal, in fact friendly, because we spent possibly five or 10 minutes talking to him about his background and where he came from,鈥 Sabeur Toumi told Sky News. He was 鈥渓aughing and joking, telling us stories about where he lived.鈥
Police raided the room, searching for clues about Masood.
Masood鈥檚 mother lives in rural Wales, according to a website on which she sells handmade cushions and handbags. The listings on Folksy by Janet Ajao have been taken down, but in an archived version of the site, she describes living in 鈥渞ural west Wales with my husband, border collie and a few chickens.鈥 Calls to the home in remote Trelech, Wales, went unanswered Friday.
When Masood was in school, he took his stepfather鈥檚 name, Ajao. He was athletic and popular in high school, known as someone who liked to party, according to Stuart Knight, a former classmate, who said the young man was one of only two black students in the school of 600.
鈥淚 am in shock 鈥 that is not sympathy for what he has done 鈥 he was a nice guy and I鈥檓 surprised he turned and did what he did,鈥 Knight said.

Not from Muslim neighborhood
In one of the last places Masood lived, a home in Birmingham, neighbors recalled him as a quiet man whose wife was veiled and who wore traditional Muslim clothing. But the neighborhood is not among one of the city鈥檚 many Muslim enclaves, suggesting he was not deeply embedded in its religious community.
Moazzam Begg, a former Guantanamo prisoner born and raised in Birmingham, said the details emerging of the attacker鈥檚 life raised questions about where he was radicalized.
鈥淗e did not live in a Muslim neighborhood. In my mind, in my analysis, he was probably a drifter,鈥 said Begg, adding that no one he knew in the community had met Masood. 鈥淚鈥檇 also be surprised if he had any connection with a mosque, because sadly they are places where you can no longer discuss politics or air grievances.鈥
Since British authorities began cracking down on mosques, many people are instead being radicalized online, Berg added.
Cultural and religious alienation can fuel such violence, he added.
Begg helps run a group called Cage that has encountered extremists who spoke of their alienation before they committed attacks. While in prison, Begg said he saw others who succumbed to radicalism. He said groups like Daesh can exploit people鈥檚 weaknesses and criminality.
Late Friday, the British government honored a lawmaker who battled to save the life of the police officer slain in the Parliament attack, giving him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
May鈥檚 office said Tobias Ellwood has been named to the Privy Council, a committee of senior lawmakers, judges and others that advises Queen Elizabeth II. The institution dates back a millennium.
Security Minister Ben Wallace, who helped coordinate the government response to Wednesday鈥檚 attack, was also named to the council.