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{{Short description|Syrian Islamist militant leader (born 1958)}}
'''Omar Bakri Muhammad''' (]: '''عمر بکری محمد'''; born ] in ]) is a notorious ] who until 2005, when the British government deported him, became an outspoken supporter of ] in the ]. British newspapers have called him the "Tottenham Ayatollah." After the ] the British media uncovered he was indoctrinating Muslim youth and inciting terrorism. British journalist ]'s ''"]"'', a documentary and book, depicts Ronson's interactions with Bakri.<ref name=RONSON> Strategy Page</ref><ref name=KIDNAPPLOT> The Daily Telegraph</ref>
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Omar Bakri Muhammad
| image =
| caption =
| birth_name = Omar Bakri Fostock
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1958}}
| birth_place = ], ]
| alma_mater = <!--Only higher education; not used when it is misleading about the subject's attendance/graduation (like this one).-->
| occupation =
| known_for = Founder of ]
| movement = ]<Br>]<br>]
| education = <!--Use alma mater.-->]<Br>]<Br>]
| notable_works =
| spouse =
| children = 7
| signature =
}}
'''Omar Bakri Muhammad''' ({{langx|ar|عمر بکری محمد}}; born '''Omar Bakri Fostock'''; 1958) is a ]n ] <!-- Removed "Salafi" – Actual Salafis refute him. Stick to general terms if you don't understand what Salafism is. -->militant leader born in ]. He was instrumental in developing ] in the ] before leaving the group and heading to another Islamist organisation, ], until its disbandment in 2004.


For several years, Bakri was one of the highest-profile Islamists based in ] and was frequently quoted and interviewed in the UK media. In December 2004 he vowed that ] would give the West "a ], day after day after day", if Western governments did not change their policies.<ref name="Crossroads">{{citation |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/10/international/europe/10qaeda.html?ei=5070&en=199f139274bedc6b&ex=1121918400&th=&emc=th&pagewanted=all |title=For a Decade, London Thrived as a Busy Crossroads of Terror |work=The New York Times |date= 10 July 2005 |access-date=12 December 2009 |first=Elaine |last=Sciolino |author2=Don Van Natta Jr}}</ref> He has been described as "closely linked to ]"<ref name="SPIRITUAL">{{citation |url=http://archives.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/05/27/time.alqaeda/ |title=Al-Qaeda now |publisher=CNN |date=27 May 2002 |access-date=12 December 2009 |archive-date=5 January 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080105162736/http://archives.cnn.com/2002/ALLPOLITICS/05/27/time.alqaeda/ |url-status=dead }}</ref>—having released prepared statements from ] after the ]<ref>{{Harvnb |Ronson|2002|p=61}}</ref>—but also as the "] ]", "little more than a loudmouth", and "a figure of fun".<ref name="Tottenham">
==History==
{{cite news
Bakri joined the Syrian branch of the ] as a young man participating in their revolt in 1982 against the Syrian ] and the government of ]. When the rebellion was crushed by the authorities Bakri relocated to ], gained ] citizenship and joined the local branch of ].
|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article547466.ece
|title=Terror links of the Tottenham Ayatollah: Nick Fielding reveals the influence of a preacher once seen as a mere loudmouth
|work=]
|author=Nick Fielding
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110224025322/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article547466.ece
|archive-date=24 February 2011
}}
</ref>


In 2005, following the ], '']'' reported that "a dozen members" of his group ] "have taken part in suicide bombings or have become close to Al-Qaeda and its support network".<ref name=Tottenham/> Shortly after, Bakri left the UK, where he had sheltered for 20 years, for ]. While there, he was informed by the ] that he would not be allowed back into the UK.<ref name="stayout">{{citation|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/08/12/uk.security/index.html |title=Britain bars freed cleric Bakri |publisher=CNN |date=21 July 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080105115925/http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/europe/08/12/uk.security/index.html |archive-date=5 January 2008 }}</ref>
In ] Bakri moved to ] in ] where he set up ] as one of the ]s for Hizb ut-Tahrir in ]. Bakri moved to ] in ] and was given indefinite leave to remain under ] laws. He founded the ] publishing house in London and served as a ] of ] in the 'Court of the United Kingdom.' From his home in ] Bakri continued to distribute Islamist literature and organise gatherings in Britain as an informal leader of Al-Muhajiroun.


Lebanon's state-run National News Agency said on 12 November 2010 that Bakri was among 54 people sentenced by a military court to life in prison with ] after being accused of acts of ].<ref name=Bloomberg>{{cite news|title=Muslim cleric given life term in absentia|page=A6|newspaper=]|author=Bloomberg News|author-link=Bloomberg News|date=13 November 2010}}</ref> After the decision, Bakri told reporters, he would "not spend one day in prison", and said, "I will not hand myself in to any court. I do not believe in the law in Britain as in Lebanon." On 14 November 2010, he was arrested by the Lebanese police and was transferred to ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-11579274|title=Muslim cleric Omar Bakri Muhammad arrested in Lebanon|publisher=The BBC|date=14 November 2010|access-date=14 November 2010}}</ref> In October 2014, Bakri was sentenced to six years in prison with hard labour by a Lebanese court. He was released from prison on 29 March 2023.
In ] Bakri resigned from Hizb ut-Tahrir after disagreements on policy, style and methods, declaring Al-Muhajiroun an independent organisation. He initially founded the group as a traditional ] organisation dedicated to the tenets of Islamic law and supportive of international Islamist causes. The group did not directly associate itself with ] movements. After September 11, 2001, Bakri praised the attackers as "magnificent" and changed his leanings towards the theology and philosophy of ]. Bakri Muhammad then renounced his previous religious views, and declared himself a follower of ]. Media outlets and British Muslims criticised him for his open support for various international ]ist organisations.


==Biography==
His main students were ], Abdur-Rahman Saleem, Abu Uzair and Abu Izzadeen Umar Brooks.
===Early life and education===
Bakri was born into a wealthy family in the city of ], ], his father was Syrian, while his mother was Turkish.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Refugees|first=United Nations High Commissioner for|title=Refworld {{!}} A Profile of Syrian Jihadist Omar Bakri Muhammad|url=https://www.refworld.org/docid/50ee8ff12.html|access-date=2020-08-23|website=Refworld|language=en|quote="Bakri was born in Aleppo, Syria in 1958"}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Ltd |first=Hymns Ancient & Modern |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pCHhcMbxmMIC&dq=born+to+a+lebanese+father+and+syrian+mother&pg=PA21 |title=ThirdWay |date=2003-03-01 |publisher=Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd |language=en}}</ref> According to ], Bakri claimed that his family had "chauffeurs and servants and palaces in Syria, Turkey and Lebanon".<ref name="Ronson 2002 20">{{Harvnb |Ronson|2002|pp=19–20}}</ref>


From the age of five, he was enrolled in the al-Kutaab Islamic boarding schools (a primary school, known as a madrassa, that teaches children how to ]) where he studied the Qur'anic Sciences, ] (the sayings of the ] and ]), ] (Islamic Jurisprudence), and ] (The detailed biography of the Prophet of Islam), etc.<ref name=OTAIBI>{{citation |url=http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=290 |title=Al-Muhajiroun in the UK: An Interview with Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed |publisher=The Jamestown Foundation}}</ref>
In ] Bakri made a televised appeal to the captors of ], a hostage in ]. After his speech Bakri said, "I appeal myself to them, you see, that to show guidance and mercy to any victim in their hand. But after that I can't myself guarantee anything except to tell you these people mean business."


Bakri joined the ] branch of the ] as a young man. He did not participate in their ] against the ] and the government of ].<ref name=OTAIBI/>
In November ] the ] programs ] and ], in an investigation into the radicalisation of young British Muslims, reported that Bakri is regularly broadcasting hate messages against the UK government and non-Muslims via the internet, using a range of pseudonyms. Speech analysis experts confirmed his voice. The BBC penetrated the broadcasts using undercover investigators from the group ''Vigil''.


In 1979, Bakri left Lebanon and moved to ], ], where he studied at ] for six months. He left Al-Azhar before he could get a degree due to disagreements with his teachers.<ref name=OTAIBI/>
During an online question and answer session a Vigil member asked Bakri if Dublin Airport should be a terrorist target because U.S. troops transit there on the way to Iraq. Bakri told the member to "hit the target and hit it very hard. That issue should be understood. Your situation there is quite difficult therefore the answer lies in your question."<ref></ref> He also said the ] London bombers were in "]."


Throughout his life, Bakri said that he joined many Islamic movements including Muslim Students, Ebad ul-Rahman, al-Ikhwan (al-Tali'ah section),{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}} and ]. According to an interview with "Jamestown Special Correspondent" Mahan Abedin,<ref>{{Cite web|title=Al-Muhajiroun in the UK: An Interview with Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed|url=https://jamestown.org/interview/al-muhajiroun-in-the-uk-an-interview-with-sheikh-omar-bakri-mohammed/|access-date=2020-08-23|website=Jamestown|language=en-US}}</ref> Omar Bakri joined Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HT) in Beirut and maintained contacts with it in Cairo, and started an HT cell in Saudi Arabia. <!--Delete unsourced material -->
==Dealings with the British Government==
In ] Bakri disbanded ], saying that "all Muslims should unite together against a hostile West," although increasing pressure from UK authorities is thought to be a leading contributory factor. Bakri said a "pact" between the British government and Muslims had been "violated," blaming this breakdown on the decision to send British forces to join the US-led intervention in Iraq. On ] ] Bakri left the United Kingdom following stories that the UK Government were planning to investigate certain Muslim clerics under little-used ] laws. He was banned from returning by British ] ] stating that Bakri's presence in Britain was "not conducive to the public good."<ref name=PUBLICGOOD> BBC News</ref> He subsequently took up residence in ]. In July 2006 he tried to leave Lebanon on a Royal Navy vessel evacuating British citizens, but was turned away.<ref name=NAVY> BBC News</ref>


Bakri said that he studied at the university of ] in ] and the ].<ref>Omar Bakri, ''Essential Fiqh''. London: The Islamic Book Company, 1996. p. 3</ref> In 1984, the Saudi Arabian government arrested Bakri in Jeddah, but released him on bail.
On ], ], British anti-terror police stopped Omar Bakri's son, ], at ], and seized £13,000 that he intended to deliver to Bakri in Lebanon. The money was held under the ], pending an investigation, but Fostok was allowed to board his flight.<ref> ''The Scotsman'' 26 October 2006</ref> Responding to this, Bakri said, "I am not expecting any problem with the money but if I do not get it there will be trouble. I will take action because it is my property. God says you must do all in your power to get something back if it is taken from you - even if it costs you your life. They will be playing with fire."<ref> ''Life Style Extra'' 25 October 2006</ref> Bakri claims that the money is a gift, but it has been reported that Bakri told followers on the Paltalk website in ] that if they wanted to send him money for the financing of "]," they should do so through his son Fostok, who "keeps low profile." He posted Fostok's cell phone number and invited them to call him directly.<ref> ''The Sun'' 26 October 2006</ref>


===In United Kingdom===
==Kidnapping plot==
Bakri moved to the United Kingdom on 14 January 1986.<ref name=OTAIBI/> Later, he travelled to the United States to study English; he returned to the United Kingdom to assume the leadership of ] and become their spiritual leader. He defended the ] faith in public debates against Christian apologists, such as ].<ref>, ''Christianity Today'', 1 February 2005</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i374yBEbDd8C&q=jay+smith&pg=PA98|title=Islam: An Introduction to Religion, Culture, and History|pages=105 and 98|date=7 October 2008|publisher=Thomas Nelson |isbn=9781418583781}}</ref>
On ] 2007 British police arrested nine suspected terrorists who were allegedly planning to kidnap, torture, and behead a British Muslim in the army, all of which would be videotaped and later broadcast on the internet. The soldier had served in the ], but had returned home to Britain on temporary leave. On ] secret recordings of Bakri Muhammad emerged in which he calls for the attack. Bakri told listeners, "When you meet , slice their own necks. And when you make the blood spill all over, and the enemy becomes so tired, now start to take from them prisoners. Then free them or exchange them until the war is finished. Verily they remind the ] of removing the head of the enemy. They remind the sunnah of slaughtering the enemy. They remind the sunnah of how to strike the neck of the enemy. We saw him in his brother's house. They removed the head of the enemy. Use the sword and remove the head of the enemy."<ref name=KIDNAPPLOT/>


In the UK, Bakri worked for ten years helping to build up Hizb ut-Tahrir. According to ex-Hizb ut-Tahrir associate ], Bakri encouraged its members to engage in vigilantism against non-Muslims and Muslim women: "We were encouraged by Omar Bakri to operate like street gangs and we did, prowling London, fighting Indian ] in the west and African Christians in the east. We intimidated Muslim women until they wore the ] and we thought we were invincible."<ref>, news.com.au; accessed 25 October 2015.</ref>
He previously called for a kidnapping-terrorist attack in 2005. In another incident he said he hoped someone would "capture British Muslims who are in the Army over there."<ref name=KIDNAPPLOT/>


In 1996, Bakri split with Hizb ut-Tahrir over disagreements on policy, style and methods. He declared that ] was an independent organisation<ref name=OTAIBI/> and continued as its Amir until 2003.{{citation needed|date=October 2015}}
==Quotes by Omar Bakri Muhammad==

*(On the deaths of British servicemen in a Nimrod air accident in Afghanistan) "Allah has his own soldiers and I was so happy. I was just thanking Allah."<ref name=HAPPY> The Sun</ref>
After the ] in the United States, Bakri praised the attackers as "magnificent."<ref name="PUBLICGOOD"/> He began to support the theology and philosophy of ]. Bakri said that he had become a ] Muslim.<ref name=OTAIBI/> Media outlets and British Muslims criticised him for his open support for various international ]ist organisations. On 13 September 2001, Bakri told the '']'', "When I first heard about , there was some initial delight about such an attack. I received a phone call and said, 'Oh, wow, the United States has come under attack.' It was exciting."<ref>{{Harvnb|Ronson|2002|pp=9–10}}</ref>
*(Trying to get back to Britain during the bombing of Lebanon) "What concerns me is my safety. I'd be happy with a month's visa but this morning they told me I couldn't because I'm not a British citizen any more."<ref name=EXILE> The Sun</ref>

*(Asked on internet chat room if it would be correct to bomb Dublin airport) "Hit the target and hit it very hard."<ref name=TARGET> BBC News</ref>
According to '']'', Bakri was left alone by British law prior to July 2005 despite actions such as an issuing a ] "containing a death threat against President ] of ]" because:
*"I condemn any killing and any bombing against any innocent people in Britain or abroad, but I expect the British people to condemn the killing of Muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan"{{citation needed}}

*"But I think that would be political suicide for the British government if they started to deport and imprison all extremists and radicals, because if, god forbid, something happened again, they would have nobody left to blame."{{citation needed}}
<blockquote>Bakri, who acts as spiritual leader, insisted that his followers obey a "covenant of security" which, while encouraging terror abroad, forbade them from carrying out attacks in Britain.<ref name=Tottenham/></blockquote>
*"Why I condemn Osama Bin Laden for? I condemn Tony Blair, I condemn George Bush. I would never condemn Osama Bin Laden or any Muslims."<ref name=NOCONDEMN> BBC News</ref>

*"We don't make a distinction between civilians and non-civilians, innocents and non-innocents. Only between Muslims and unbelievers. And the life of an unbeliever has no value. It has no sanctity."<ref name=DISCTINCTIONS> The Age</ref>
But "the authorities may have been lulled into a false sense of security", because the covenant was not permanent.<ref name=Tottenham/> In November 2004 Bakri disbanded Al-Muhajiroun, saying that "all Muslims should unite together against a hostile West". Three months later Bakri said this "covenant of security" was no longer in force, having been violated by the British government.<ref name=Tottenham/> "Experts note", according to ''The Times,'' that the ] followed "four months later".<ref name=Tottenham/>
*(On Israel) "We are talking about a cancer in the heart of the Muslim world. It must be eradicated and removed"

*"As long as the Iraqi did not deliberately kill women and children, and they were killed in the crossfire, that would be okay."
The same article reports "'']'' has identified more than a dozen members of ALM who have taken part in suicide bombings or have become close to Al-Qaeda and its support network", including Mohammed Naeem Noor Khan, "a computer expert now in a Pakistani prison"; Zeeshan Siddiqui, from Hounslow, west London; Bilal Mohammed from Birmingham; and Asif Hanif.<ref name=Tottenham/>
*"What happened yesterday confirmed that as long as the cause and the root problem is still there ... we will see the same effect we saw on July 7."

*"If the cause is still there the effect will happen again and again,"
Bakri received an estimated £250,000 in state benefits since claiming asylum in Britain in 1986.<ref>{{citation|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article588222.ece|title=Bakri's followers deported to Britain|work=The Times|first=Daniel|last=McGrory|date=9 November 2005|access-date=12 December 2009|location=London, UK}}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> Since he left the country in 2005, he has been banned from entering Britain.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4144792.stm|title=Cleric Bakri Barred from Britain|work=BBC News|date=12 August 2005|access-date=28 December 2009}}</ref>
*"I would like to see the Islamic flag fly, not only over number 10 Downing Street, but over the whole world,"

*"But Islam is a message of war for those who declare war against Muslims,"
====Students====
*"Islam prohibits Muslims from allowing themselves to become captives of nonbelievers."
His main students were ], ], ], ]<ref name=STUDENTS>{{citation|url=http://aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=1&id=5393|title=UK Muslim fundamentalists to hold conference on 7/7 anniversary|work=Asharq Al-Awsat|date=22 June 2006|first=Mohammed|last=Al Shafey|access-date=12 December 2009|archive-date=27 September 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927001701/http://aawsat.com/english/news.asp?section=1&id=5393|url-status=dead}}</ref> and ], a trained civil engineer who leads or led the ].<ref name=AUZAIR>{{Citation|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1109334-3,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080104014109/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1109334-3,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=4 January 2008|title=Generation Jihad|magazine=Time|date=26 September 2005|access-date=12 December 2009|first=Jane|last=Walker}}</ref>
*"They said 'sorry, the only people who will be in the boat are those who have British citizenship and those who've got British passports.'"

*"I know controversy surrounds all the news about me, I am myself accepting my destiny. But I have the right like anybody else to look for safety."
===Return to the Middle East===
*"] was a great man. He led a serious uprising against the House of al-]. In the end the Saudi authorities could not defeat Juhaiman and his men; therefore they brought in the Jordanians and the French."
On 6 August 2005, Bakri left the United Kingdom following stories that the UK Government were planning to investigate certain Muslim clerics under little-used ] laws. He was banned from returning by British ] ] stating that Bakri's presence in Britain was "not conducive to the public good".<ref name=PUBLICGOOD>{{citation|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4133150.stm|title=Cleric Bakri 'will return' to UK|work=BBC News|date=9 August 2005|access-date=12 December 2009}}</ref> He subsequently took up residence in Lebanon. During the ], he tried to flee Lebanon on a Royal Navy vessel evacuating British citizens; he was turned away by the Royal Navy.<ref name=NAVY>{{citation|access-date=12 December 2009|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/5201956.stm|title=Britons escape Lebanon 'trauma'|work=BBC News|date=21 July 2006}}</ref>

In 2005, Bakri made a televised appeal to the captors of ], a hostage in ]. After his speech Bakri said, "I appeal myself to them, you see, that to show guidance and mercy to any victim in their hand. But after that I can't myself guarantee anything except to tell you these people mean business."<ref name=KEMBER>{{citation |url=http://edition.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0512/08/ywt.01.html |title=Rice's European tour; Attacks in Baghdad on the rise; Hostages in Iraq; Opposition gains power in Egyptian elections|publisher=CNN|access-date=12 December 2009|date=8 December 2005}}</ref>

Bakri has reaffirmed the ] on ], saying from Lebanon, "Rushdie will continue living his life in hiding. Any fatwa will stand until it is fulfilled. He is always going to be worried about a Muslim reaching him."<ref name=RUSHDIEFATWA>{{cite web|url=http://www.johannhari.com/archive/article.php?id=1002|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061031215748/http://www.johannhari.com/archive/article.php?id=1002|url-status=dead|archive-date=31 October 2006|title=Salman Rushdie: An interview|publisher=Johann Hari|date=10 October 2006|access-date=12 December 2009}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb|Ronson|2002|p=61}}</ref>

During an online question-and-answer session, a Vigil member asked Bakri if Dublin Airport should be a terrorist target because U.S. troops transit there on the way to Iraq. Bakri told the member to "hit the target and hit it very hard. That issue should be understood. Your situation there is quite difficult, therefore the answer lies in your question." He said the ] London bombers were in "]".<ref name=TARGET>{{citation|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6143632.stm |work=BBC News|title=Covert preaching of banned cleric|date=14 November 2006|access-date=12 December 2009}}</ref>

On 27 July 2007, a special edition of '']'' entitled 'Battle for Islam' was broadcast, in which Gavin Esler presented on the battle for the heart and soul of Islam.<ref>{{citation|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_6910000/newsid_6917200/6917210.stm|title=Newsnight special – Battle for Islam|work=BBC News|date=26 July 2007}}</ref> Omar Bakri featured live from Lebanon alongside ] in Los Angeles, and ] in the studio in London with ]. Currently Bakri reportedly heads the Atibaa' ] movement.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}}

===Family===
Bakri is, or was, married to Hanah and has seven children.<ref>{{citation |title=Muslim cleric Omar Bakri sentenced to life in Lebanon |work=BBC News |date=12 November 2010 |access-date=3 January 2012 |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-11742559}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Muslim cleric Omar Bakri sentenced to life in Lebanon|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-11742559|work=BBC News|access-date=8 April 2013|date=12 November 2010}}</ref> According to ex-Hizb ut-Tahrir member Maajid Nawaz, Bakhri's daughter, Yasmin Fostok, "grew so disillusioned with her father's rhetoric that in one monumental act of defiance she left home and became a stripper".<ref>Maajid Nawaz, ''Radical'' (London: W.H. Allen, 2012), p. 328.</ref>

On 30 December 2015, his son, Bilal, was killed while fighting for ISIS in Iraq.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/30/omar-bakri-son-killed-iraq-fighting-for-isis-report|title=Son of radical cleric Omar Bakri believed killed in Iraq fighting for Isis|agency=Agence France-Presse|date=29 December 2015|newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref>

==Alleged ties to terrorism==
British newspapers have called him the "Tottenham Ayatollah",<ref name=KIDNAPPLOT>{{citation|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/02/04/nterr104.xml|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080103180401/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/02/04/nterr104.xml|url-status=dead|archive-date=3 January 2008|title=Ex-UK cleric 'inspired plot to kidnap soldier'|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=4 February 2007|access-date=12 December 2009|first=Andrew|last=Alderson|location=London, UK}}</ref> despite him identifying as Salafi and the title "ayatollah" being a Shia epithet.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Calmard|first1=Jean|title=Ayatollah|url=http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t236/e0088|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140818205512/http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t236/e0088|url-status=dead|archive-date=18 August 2014|website=Oxford Islamic Studies Online|publisher=Oxford University Press|access-date=24 February 2017}}</ref> Former ] ] ] described him as a "terrorist who believes in planting bombs and blowing up women and children in ]".<ref>{{harvnb|Ronson|2002|p=33}}</ref> ], a French expert on Islamic terrorism, said that "every al-Qaeda operative recently arrested or identified in Europe had come into contact with Bakri at some time or other".<ref>, cnn.com; accessed 25 October 2015.</ref>

===Internet broadcasts===
In January 2005, ''The Times'' monitored live, 90-minute internet lectures from Bakri in a chatroom in which he told listeners, "I believe the whole of Britain has become ] (land of war). The ] (non-believer) has no sanctity for their own life or property." He said Muslims should join the jihad "wherever you are" and told a woman she was allowed to do a suicide bombing. In another broadcast he said, "Al-Qaeda and all its branches and organizations of the world, that is the victorious group and they have the ] and you are obliged to join. There is no need&nbsp;... to mess about." Two days later, in another broadcast, he said that dead mujaheedin "are calling you and shouting to you from far distant places: al jihad, al jihad. They say to you my dear Muslim brothers, 'Where is your weapon, where is your weapon?' Come on to the jihad."<ref name=DARALHARB>{{citation|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article413387.ece|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110224025337/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article413387.ece|url-status=dead|archive-date=24 February 2011|title=Britain's online imam declares war as he calls young to jihad|work=The Times|date=17 January 2005|first=Sean|last=O'Neil |author2=Yaakov Lappin|access-date=12 December 2009|location=London, UK}}</ref>

], a Labour MP, claimed that "With these words he may well be committing offences under ] and other legislation. I will be raising this immediately with the Home Secretary and the Metropolitan Police."<ref name=DARALHARB/>

====Comments on terrorist attacks====
Commenting on 11 September 2001 attacks, '']'' claims he said on his website, "I am very happy today. As much as I regret the innocent people who passed away, with the USA you must pay."<ref name=DARALHARB /> The ] however claims that he said in an interview, "If Islamists did it—and most likely it is Islamists, because of the nature of what happened—then they have fully misunderstood the teachings of Islam. ... Even the most radical of us have condemned this. I am always considered to be a radical in the Islamic world and even I condemn it."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/shaykh_omar_bakri_leader_of_al_muhajirun_condemns_9_11_attack|title=Shaykh Omar Bakri, leader of al-Muhajirun Condemns 9/11 Attack|publisher=Theamericanmuslim.org|date=13 September 2001|access-date=12 December 2009}}</ref> Bakri, discussing the ], is alleged by '']'' to have said, "What happened in Madrid is all revenge. Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, life for life."<ref name=DARALHARB/>

===Financing of "mujahideen"===
On 24 October 2006 British security officials arrested Omar Bakri's son, Abdul Rahman Fostok, at ], and seized £13,000 that he intended to deliver to Bakri in Lebanon. The money was held under the ], pending an investigation, but Fostok was allowed to board his flight. Responding to this, Bakri said,

{{blockquote|I am not expecting any problem with the money but if I do not get it there will be trouble. I will take action because it is my property. God says you must do all in your power to get something back if it is taken from you – even if it costs you your life. They will be playing with fire.}}

===Kidnapping plot===
{{Main|31 January 2007 Birmingham raid}}
On 31 January 2007 British police ] who were allegedly planning to kidnap, torture, and behead a British Muslim in the army, all of which would be videotaped and later broadcast on the internet. The soldier had served in the ], but had returned home to Britain on temporary leave. On 4 February secret recordings of Bakri Muhammad emerged in which he calls for the attack. Bakri told listeners,

{{blockquote|When you meet , slice their own necks. And when you make the blood spill all over, and the enemy becomes so tired, now start to take from them prisoners. Then free them or exchange them until the war is finished.<ref>{{Qref|47|4|b=y}} So when you meet the disbelievers ˹in battle˺, strike ˹their˺ necks until you have thoroughly subdued them, then bind them firmly. Later ˹free them either as˺ an act of grace or by ransom until the war comes to an end. So will it be. Had Allah willed, He ˹Himself˺ could have inflicted punishment on them. But He does ˹this only to˺ test some of you by means of others. And those who are martyred in the cause of Allah, He will never render their deeds void.</ref> Verily they remind the ] of removing the head of the enemy. They remind the sunnah of slaughtering the enemy. They remind the sunnah of how to strike the neck of the enemy. We saw him in his brother's house. They removed the head of the enemy. Use the sword and remove the head of the enemy.<ref name=KIDNAPPLOT/>}}

He previously called for a kidnapping-terrorist attack in 2005. In another incident he said he hoped someone would "capture British Muslims who are in the Army over there".<ref name=KIDNAPPLOT/> He has said that a ] is alright if children are not deliberately killed.<ref name=BESLANSTYLE>{{citation |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4190999.stm |work=BBC News |title=Cleric denies UK al-Qaeda claims |date=20 January 2005 |access-date=12 December 2009}}</ref>

===''Them: Adventures With Extremists''===
{{Main|Them: Adventures With Extremists}}
British journalist ]'s '']'', a documentary ('']'', directed by ]) and book published in 2001, depicts Ronson and Dibb's interactions with Bakri. Ronson depicts Bakri as a charismatic orator who tells a cheering crowd of 5000 that "he will not rest" until he sees "the ] flying over ]", and calls for the stoning of fornicators and closing of pubs.<ref name="Ronson 2002 20"/> He tells Ronson, "I cannot take a day off, an hour off, even a minute off. I will take time off when I am with Allah, when I die in the battlefield and become a martyr."<ref>{{Harvnb |Ronson|2002|p=47}}</ref> But he also describes Bakri as living in a semi-detached council house, enjoying watching a video of Disney's '']'', being unable to hold a fish caught on a fishing line, and calling himself "actually very nice".<ref>{{Harvnb |Ronson|2002|p=23}}</ref><ref>{{Harvnb |Ronson|2002|p=49}}</ref>

In a phone call after the 9/11 attack on the evening of his arrest and release without charge, Ronson reports Bakri as telling him,

{{blockquote|Oh Jon, I need you more than ever now. You know I am harmless, don't you? You know I am just a clown. You know I am laughable, don't you? ... Why don't people believe you when you tell them that I am just a harmless clown?<ref>{{Harvnb |Ronson|2002|p=10}}</ref>}}

Ronson replied that he had never thought that.

===Arrests and conviction in Lebanon===
Future Television interviewed Bakri on 11 August 2005. Bakri said he did not have ties to Al Qaeda, calling it a "media creation" and said he did not intend to return to Britain. During the interview, Bakri said, "I left Britain on my own accord though I have not been accused of anything there or in Lebanon&nbsp;... but the London attacks are the reason I have returned". According to media reports, Lebanese police arrested Bakri as soon as he left the building after the interview. Police later said the arrest was "a routine arrest to determine his reasons and if his residency in Lebanon is legitimate". Lebanese Information Minister Ghazi Aridi later said Bakri was arrested as a "precautionary measure".<ref name=FUTURETV>{{citation|url=http://www.aljazeerah.info/News%20archives/2005%20News%20Archives/August/12%20%20n/Omar%20Bakri%20Detained%20in%20Lebanon.htm |title=Omar Bakri detained in Lebanon |publisher=Al Jazeerah }}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> British Ambassador to Lebanon James Watt said, "We made no request for his arrest, nor for his extradition. As far as I am concerned, this is a very simple story – it is a Lebanese citizen who returned to Lebanon and has been arrested by the Lebanese police. We have nothing to do with it and it's not in our place to comment on what has happened."<ref name=FUTURETV/>

In mid-November 2010, Bakri was sentenced to life in prison in Lebanon in a terrorism case that he claimed to know nothing about, but was subsequently released on bail when witnesses who testified against him withdrew their testimony.<ref name=Bloomberg/><ref name= Independent2014>{{cite news |title=Banned radical cleric Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohamed arrested in Lebanon over 'links to terrorism' |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/banned-radical-cleric-sheikh-omar-bakri-mohamed-arrested-in-lebanon-over-links-to-terrorism-9434213.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220524/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/banned-radical-cleric-sheikh-omar-bakri-mohamed-arrested-in-lebanon-over-links-to-terrorism-9434213.html |archive-date=24 May 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |newspaper=The Independent |date=26 May 2014 |access-date=27 May 2014}}</ref>

After his release he was reported to be living in ]. In April 2014, his home was raided by Lebanese security forces because of his alleged involvement in fighting between the area's ] community and local Sunnis. He fled the city and the Lebanese authorities announced he was wanted for "endangering national security".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-26847794 |title=Cleric Omar Bakri 'on the run' in Lebanon |date=2 April 2014 |work=BBC News |access-date=27 May 2014}}</ref> In May 2014 he was arrested in the city of ] and, in a press conference, the Lebanese Interior Minister, ], alleged that Bakri "has contributed in every aspect in supporting terrorism".<ref name= Independent2014/>

In October 2014, Bakri was sentenced to six years in prison with hard labour by a Lebanese court for founding a Lebanese affiliate of the Al-Qaeda linked ] terrorist group ], and of building a training camp for Nusra Front fighters in Lebanon. The following year, two of Bakri's sons were killed fighting in the ranks of rival extremist group the ]. The first, Muhammad, was killed in Aleppo, Syria, and the second, Bilal, in ] province in Iraq in December 2015.<ref>Rai al Youm (29 December 2015), (مقتل نجل الاسلامي المتطرف عمر بكري في العراق خلال مشاركته في القتال ضمن تنظيم الدولة الاسلامية), Raialyoum</ref>

==Publications==
The author of "many booklets and articles",<ref>David Zeidan, ''The Resurgence of Religion: A Comparative Study of Selected Themes in Christian and Islamic Fundamentalist Discourse'', BRILL (2003), p. 294</ref> some of his publications include:
*''Essential ]'', London : Islamic Book Company, 1996.
*''The role of the mosque'', London : Islamic Book Company, 1996.
*''The political struggle for Islam'', London : Al-Khilafah Publications, 1998.
*''Al-Fareed Fee Mukhtasar Al-Tawheed: A Summary of the Unique ]'', London : Al-Muhajiroun Publications, 2003.

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==Bibliography==
* {{citation |last=Ronson |first=Jon |title=Them: Adventures With Extremists |publisher=Simon and Schuster |year=2002 |isbn=978-0-7432-2707-0}}
*al-Ashanti, AbdulHaq and as-Salafi, Abu Ameenah AbdurRahman. (2009) ''A Critical Study of the Multiple Identities and Disguises of 'al-Muhajiroun': Exposing the Antics of the Cult Followers of Omar Bakri Muhammad Fustuq''. London: Jamiah Media, 2009 {{ISBN|978-0-9551099-4-2}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Wikiquote}}
*: Videos
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170331213753/http://www.historycommons.org/entity.jsp?entity=sheikh_omar_bakri_mohammed |date=31 March 2017 }}
*: '']'' radio programme featuring journalist ]'s account of the time he spent with Omar Bakri Muhammad.
*
*
*: '']'' radio programme featuring journalist ]'s account of the time he spent with Omar Bakri Muhammad.
* *
*
* an interview with Omar Bakri Muhammad (''Christianity Today'' article) * an interview with Omar Bakri Muhammad (''Christianity Today'' article)
* *
* *
*
*
* - ''Social Affairs Unit'' article on Omar Bakri and the craving for celebrity.


{{Al-Muhajiroun}}
==References==
{{Authority control}}
{{reflist}}


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Latest revision as of 02:56, 22 December 2024

Syrian Islamist militant leader (born 1958)

Omar Bakri Muhammad
BornOmar Bakri Fostock
1958 (age 65–66)
Aleppo, Syria
EducationAl-Azhar University
Umm al-Qura University
Islamic University of Madinah
Known forFounder of Al-Muhajiroun
MovementMuslim Brotherhood
Hizb ut-Tahrir
Al-Muhajiroun
Children7

Omar Bakri Muhammad (Arabic: عمر بکری محمد; born Omar Bakri Fostock; 1958) is a Syrian Islamist militant leader born in Aleppo. He was instrumental in developing Hizb ut-Tahrir in the United Kingdom before leaving the group and heading to another Islamist organisation, Al-Muhajiroun, until its disbandment in 2004.

For several years, Bakri was one of the highest-profile Islamists based in London and was frequently quoted and interviewed in the UK media. In December 2004 he vowed that Muslims would give the West "a 9/11, day after day after day", if Western governments did not change their policies. He has been described as "closely linked to al-Qaeda"—having released prepared statements from Osama bin Laden after the 1998 United States embassy bombings—but also as the "Tottenham Ayatollah", "little more than a loudmouth", and "a figure of fun".

In 2005, following the 7 July 2005 London bombings, The Sunday Times reported that "a dozen members" of his group Al-Muhajiroun "have taken part in suicide bombings or have become close to Al-Qaeda and its support network". Shortly after, Bakri left the UK, where he had sheltered for 20 years, for Lebanon. While there, he was informed by the Home Office that he would not be allowed back into the UK.

Lebanon's state-run National News Agency said on 12 November 2010 that Bakri was among 54 people sentenced by a military court to life in prison with hard labour after being accused of acts of terrorism. After the decision, Bakri told reporters, he would "not spend one day in prison", and said, "I will not hand myself in to any court. I do not believe in the law in Britain as in Lebanon." On 14 November 2010, he was arrested by the Lebanese police and was transferred to Beirut. In October 2014, Bakri was sentenced to six years in prison with hard labour by a Lebanese court. He was released from prison on 29 March 2023.

Biography

Early life and education

Bakri was born into a wealthy family in the city of Aleppo, Syria, his father was Syrian, while his mother was Turkish. According to Jon Ronson, Bakri claimed that his family had "chauffeurs and servants and palaces in Syria, Turkey and Lebanon".

From the age of five, he was enrolled in the al-Kutaab Islamic boarding schools (a primary school, known as a madrassa, that teaches children how to recite and keep Quran by heart) where he studied the Qur'anic Sciences, Hadith (the sayings of the Prophet of Islam and his Companions), Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence), and Seerah (The detailed biography of the Prophet of Islam), etc.

Bakri joined the Syrian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood as a young man. He did not participate in their 1982 Hama revolt against the Syrian Ba'ath Party and the government of Hafez al-Assad.

In 1979, Bakri left Lebanon and moved to Cairo, Egypt, where he studied at Al-Azhar University for six months. He left Al-Azhar before he could get a degree due to disagreements with his teachers.

Throughout his life, Bakri said that he joined many Islamic movements including Muslim Students, Ebad ul-Rahman, al-Ikhwan (al-Tali'ah section), and Hizb ut Tahrir. According to an interview with "Jamestown Special Correspondent" Mahan Abedin, Omar Bakri joined Hizb-ut-Tahrir (HT) in Beirut and maintained contacts with it in Cairo, and started an HT cell in Saudi Arabia.

Bakri said that he studied at the university of Umm al-Qura in Mecca and the Islamic University of Madinah. In 1984, the Saudi Arabian government arrested Bakri in Jeddah, but released him on bail.

In United Kingdom

Bakri moved to the United Kingdom on 14 January 1986. Later, he travelled to the United States to study English; he returned to the United Kingdom to assume the leadership of Hizb ut-Tahrir and become their spiritual leader. He defended the Muslim faith in public debates against Christian apologists, such as Jay Smith.

In the UK, Bakri worked for ten years helping to build up Hizb ut-Tahrir. According to ex-Hizb ut-Tahrir associate Maajid Nawaz, Bakri encouraged its members to engage in vigilantism against non-Muslims and Muslim women: "We were encouraged by Omar Bakri to operate like street gangs and we did, prowling London, fighting Indian Sikhs in the west and African Christians in the east. We intimidated Muslim women until they wore the hijab and we thought we were invincible."

In 1996, Bakri split with Hizb ut-Tahrir over disagreements on policy, style and methods. He declared that Al-Muhajiroun was an independent organisation and continued as its Amir until 2003.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States, Bakri praised the attackers as "magnificent." He began to support the theology and philosophy of Al Qaeda. Bakri said that he had become a Salafi Muslim. Media outlets and British Muslims criticised him for his open support for various international jihadist organisations. On 13 September 2001, Bakri told the Daily Mail, "When I first heard about , there was some initial delight about such an attack. I received a phone call and said, 'Oh, wow, the United States has come under attack.' It was exciting."

According to The Times, Bakri was left alone by British law prior to July 2005 despite actions such as an issuing a fatwa "containing a death threat against President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan" because:

Bakri, who acts as spiritual leader, insisted that his followers obey a "covenant of security" which, while encouraging terror abroad, forbade them from carrying out attacks in Britain.

But "the authorities may have been lulled into a false sense of security", because the covenant was not permanent. In November 2004 Bakri disbanded Al-Muhajiroun, saying that "all Muslims should unite together against a hostile West". Three months later Bakri said this "covenant of security" was no longer in force, having been violated by the British government. "Experts note", according to The Times, that the July London bombings followed "four months later".

The same article reports "The Sunday Times has identified more than a dozen members of ALM who have taken part in suicide bombings or have become close to Al-Qaeda and its support network", including Mohammed Naeem Noor Khan, "a computer expert now in a Pakistani prison"; Zeeshan Siddiqui, from Hounslow, west London; Bilal Mohammed from Birmingham; and Asif Hanif.

Bakri received an estimated £250,000 in state benefits since claiming asylum in Britain in 1986. Since he left the country in 2005, he has been banned from entering Britain.

Students

His main students were Khalid Kelly, Anjem Choudary, Sulayman Keeler, Abu Izzadeen and Abu Uzair, a trained civil engineer who leads or led the Savior Sect.

Return to the Middle East

On 6 August 2005, Bakri left the United Kingdom following stories that the UK Government were planning to investigate certain Muslim clerics under little-used treason laws. He was banned from returning by British Home Secretary Charles Clarke stating that Bakri's presence in Britain was "not conducive to the public good". He subsequently took up residence in Lebanon. During the 2006 Lebanon War, he tried to flee Lebanon on a Royal Navy vessel evacuating British citizens; he was turned away by the Royal Navy.

In 2005, Bakri made a televised appeal to the captors of Norman Kember, a hostage in Iraq. After his speech Bakri said, "I appeal myself to them, you see, that to show guidance and mercy to any victim in their hand. But after that I can't myself guarantee anything except to tell you these people mean business."

Bakri has reaffirmed the fatwa on Salman Rushdie, saying from Lebanon, "Rushdie will continue living his life in hiding. Any fatwa will stand until it is fulfilled. He is always going to be worried about a Muslim reaching him."

During an online question-and-answer session, a Vigil member asked Bakri if Dublin Airport should be a terrorist target because U.S. troops transit there on the way to Iraq. Bakri told the member to "hit the target and hit it very hard. That issue should be understood. Your situation there is quite difficult, therefore the answer lies in your question." He said the 7/7 London bombers were in "paradise".

On 27 July 2007, a special edition of Newsnight entitled 'Battle for Islam' was broadcast, in which Gavin Esler presented on the battle for the heart and soul of Islam. Omar Bakri featured live from Lebanon alongside Reza Aslan in Los Angeles, and Benazir Bhutto in the studio in London with Maryam Namazie. Currently Bakri reportedly heads the Atibaa' Ahlus Sunnah wal Jamaah movement.

Family

Bakri is, or was, married to Hanah and has seven children. According to ex-Hizb ut-Tahrir member Maajid Nawaz, Bakhri's daughter, Yasmin Fostok, "grew so disillusioned with her father's rhetoric that in one monumental act of defiance she left home and became a stripper".

On 30 December 2015, his son, Bilal, was killed while fighting for ISIS in Iraq.

Alleged ties to terrorism

British newspapers have called him the "Tottenham Ayatollah", despite him identifying as Salafi and the title "ayatollah" being a Shia epithet. Former Conservative MP Rupert Allason described him as a "terrorist who believes in planting bombs and blowing up women and children in Israel". Roland Jacquard, a French expert on Islamic terrorism, said that "every al-Qaeda operative recently arrested or identified in Europe had come into contact with Bakri at some time or other".

Internet broadcasts

In January 2005, The Times monitored live, 90-minute internet lectures from Bakri in a chatroom in which he told listeners, "I believe the whole of Britain has become Dar al-Harb (land of war). The kuffar (non-believer) has no sanctity for their own life or property." He said Muslims should join the jihad "wherever you are" and told a woman she was allowed to do a suicide bombing. In another broadcast he said, "Al-Qaeda and all its branches and organizations of the world, that is the victorious group and they have the emir and you are obliged to join. There is no need ... to mess about." Two days later, in another broadcast, he said that dead mujaheedin "are calling you and shouting to you from far distant places: al jihad, al jihad. They say to you my dear Muslim brothers, 'Where is your weapon, where is your weapon?' Come on to the jihad."

Andrew Dismore, a Labour MP, claimed that "With these words he may well be committing offences under the Terrorism Act and other legislation. I will be raising this immediately with the Home Secretary and the Metropolitan Police."

Comments on terrorist attacks

Commenting on 11 September 2001 attacks, The Times claims he said on his website, "I am very happy today. As much as I regret the innocent people who passed away, with the USA you must pay." The Montreal Gazette however claims that he said in an interview, "If Islamists did it—and most likely it is Islamists, because of the nature of what happened—then they have fully misunderstood the teachings of Islam. ... Even the most radical of us have condemned this. I am always considered to be a radical in the Islamic world and even I condemn it." Bakri, discussing the 2004 Madrid train bombings, is alleged by The Times to have said, "What happened in Madrid is all revenge. Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, life for life."

Financing of "mujahideen"

On 24 October 2006 British security officials arrested Omar Bakri's son, Abdul Rahman Fostok, at Heathrow Airport, and seized £13,000 that he intended to deliver to Bakri in Lebanon. The money was held under the Proceeds of Crime Act, pending an investigation, but Fostok was allowed to board his flight. Responding to this, Bakri said,

I am not expecting any problem with the money but if I do not get it there will be trouble. I will take action because it is my property. God says you must do all in your power to get something back if it is taken from you – even if it costs you your life. They will be playing with fire.

Kidnapping plot

Main article: 31 January 2007 Birmingham raid

On 31 January 2007 British police arrested nine suspected terrorists who were allegedly planning to kidnap, torture, and behead a British Muslim in the army, all of which would be videotaped and later broadcast on the internet. The soldier had served in the War in Afghanistan, but had returned home to Britain on temporary leave. On 4 February secret recordings of Bakri Muhammad emerged in which he calls for the attack. Bakri told listeners,

When you meet , slice their own necks. And when you make the blood spill all over, and the enemy becomes so tired, now start to take from them prisoners. Then free them or exchange them until the war is finished. Verily they remind the sunnah of removing the head of the enemy. They remind the sunnah of slaughtering the enemy. They remind the sunnah of how to strike the neck of the enemy. We saw him in his brother's house. They removed the head of the enemy. Use the sword and remove the head of the enemy.

He previously called for a kidnapping-terrorist attack in 2005. In another incident he said he hoped someone would "capture British Muslims who are in the Army over there". He has said that a Beslan-style attack is alright if children are not deliberately killed.

Them: Adventures With Extremists

Main article: Them: Adventures With Extremists

British journalist Jon Ronson's Them: Adventures With Extremists, a documentary (The Tottenham Ayatollah, directed by Saul Dibb) and book published in 2001, depicts Ronson and Dibb's interactions with Bakri. Ronson depicts Bakri as a charismatic orator who tells a cheering crowd of 5000 that "he will not rest" until he sees "the Black Flag of Islam flying over Downing Street", and calls for the stoning of fornicators and closing of pubs. He tells Ronson, "I cannot take a day off, an hour off, even a minute off. I will take time off when I am with Allah, when I die in the battlefield and become a martyr." But he also describes Bakri as living in a semi-detached council house, enjoying watching a video of Disney's The Lion King, being unable to hold a fish caught on a fishing line, and calling himself "actually very nice".

In a phone call after the 9/11 attack on the evening of his arrest and release without charge, Ronson reports Bakri as telling him,

Oh Jon, I need you more than ever now. You know I am harmless, don't you? You know I am just a clown. You know I am laughable, don't you? ... Why don't people believe you when you tell them that I am just a harmless clown?

Ronson replied that he had never thought that.

Arrests and conviction in Lebanon

Future Television interviewed Bakri on 11 August 2005. Bakri said he did not have ties to Al Qaeda, calling it a "media creation" and said he did not intend to return to Britain. During the interview, Bakri said, "I left Britain on my own accord though I have not been accused of anything there or in Lebanon ... but the London attacks are the reason I have returned". According to media reports, Lebanese police arrested Bakri as soon as he left the building after the interview. Police later said the arrest was "a routine arrest to determine his reasons and if his residency in Lebanon is legitimate". Lebanese Information Minister Ghazi Aridi later said Bakri was arrested as a "precautionary measure". British Ambassador to Lebanon James Watt said, "We made no request for his arrest, nor for his extradition. As far as I am concerned, this is a very simple story – it is a Lebanese citizen who returned to Lebanon and has been arrested by the Lebanese police. We have nothing to do with it and it's not in our place to comment on what has happened."

In mid-November 2010, Bakri was sentenced to life in prison in Lebanon in a terrorism case that he claimed to know nothing about, but was subsequently released on bail when witnesses who testified against him withdrew their testimony.

After his release he was reported to be living in Tripoli. In April 2014, his home was raided by Lebanese security forces because of his alleged involvement in fighting between the area's Alawite community and local Sunnis. He fled the city and the Lebanese authorities announced he was wanted for "endangering national security". In May 2014 he was arrested in the city of Aley and, in a press conference, the Lebanese Interior Minister, Nouhad Machnouk, alleged that Bakri "has contributed in every aspect in supporting terrorism".

In October 2014, Bakri was sentenced to six years in prison with hard labour by a Lebanese court for founding a Lebanese affiliate of the Al-Qaeda linked Syrian terrorist group Al-Nusra Front, and of building a training camp for Nusra Front fighters in Lebanon. The following year, two of Bakri's sons were killed fighting in the ranks of rival extremist group the Islamic State. The first, Muhammad, was killed in Aleppo, Syria, and the second, Bilal, in Salah al-Din province in Iraq in December 2015.

Publications

The author of "many booklets and articles", some of his publications include:

  • Essential Fiqh, London : Islamic Book Company, 1996.
  • The role of the mosque, London : Islamic Book Company, 1996.
  • The political struggle for Islam, London : Al-Khilafah Publications, 1998.
  • Al-Fareed Fee Mukhtasar Al-Tawheed: A Summary of the Unique Tawheed, London : Al-Muhajiroun Publications, 2003.

See also

References

  1. Sciolino, Elaine; Don Van Natta Jr (10 July 2005), "For a Decade, London Thrived as a Busy Crossroads of Terror", The New York Times, retrieved 12 December 2009
  2. Al-Qaeda now, CNN, 27 May 2002, archived from the original on 5 January 2008, retrieved 12 December 2009
  3. Ronson 2002, p. 61
  4. ^ Nick Fielding. "Terror links of the Tottenham Ayatollah: Nick Fielding reveals the influence of a preacher once seen as a mere loudmouth". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 24 February 2011.
  5. Britain bars freed cleric Bakri, CNN, 21 July 2006, archived from the original on 5 January 2008
  6. ^ Bloomberg News (13 November 2010). "Muslim cleric given life term in absentia". The Washington Post. p. A6.
  7. "Muslim cleric Omar Bakri Muhammad arrested in Lebanon". The BBC. 14 November 2010. Retrieved 14 November 2010.
  8. Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | A Profile of Syrian Jihadist Omar Bakri Muhammad". Refworld. Retrieved 23 August 2020. Bakri was born in Aleppo, Syria in 1958
  9. Ltd, Hymns Ancient & Modern (1 March 2003). ThirdWay. Hymns Ancient & Modern Ltd.
  10. ^ Ronson 2002, pp. 19–20
  11. ^ Al-Muhajiroun in the UK: An Interview with Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed, The Jamestown Foundation
  12. "Al-Muhajiroun in the UK: An Interview with Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohammed". Jamestown. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  13. Omar Bakri, Essential Fiqh. London: The Islamic Book Company, 1996. p. 3
  14. "There Can Be No End to Jihad", Interview by Anthony McRoy with Islamist Sheikh Omar Bakri Muhammad, Christianity Today, 1 February 2005
  15. Islam: An Introduction to Religion, Culture, and History. Thomas Nelson. 7 October 2008. pp. 105 and 98. ISBN 9781418583781.
  16. "I was a radical Islamist who hated all of you", news.com.au; accessed 25 October 2015.
  17. ^ "Cleric Bakri 'will return' to UK", BBC News, 9 August 2005, retrieved 12 December 2009
  18. Ronson 2002, pp. 9–10
  19. McGrory, Daniel (9 November 2005), "Bakri's followers deported to Britain", The Times, London, UK, retrieved 12 December 2009
  20. "Cleric Bakri Barred from Britain". BBC News. 12 August 2005. Retrieved 28 December 2009.
  21. Al Shafey, Mohammed (22 June 2006), "UK Muslim fundamentalists to hold conference on 7/7 anniversary", Asharq Al-Awsat, archived from the original on 27 September 2007, retrieved 12 December 2009
  22. Walker, Jane (26 September 2005), "Generation Jihad", Time, archived from the original on 4 January 2008, retrieved 12 December 2009
  23. "Britons escape Lebanon 'trauma'", BBC News, 21 July 2006, retrieved 12 December 2009
  24. Rice's European tour; Attacks in Baghdad on the rise; Hostages in Iraq; Opposition gains power in Egyptian elections, CNN, 8 December 2005, retrieved 12 December 2009
  25. "Salman Rushdie: An interview". Johann Hari. 10 October 2006. Archived from the original on 31 October 2006. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
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  31. Maajid Nawaz, Radical (London: W.H. Allen, 2012), p. 328.
  32. "Son of radical cleric Omar Bakri believed killed in Iraq fighting for Isis". The Guardian. Agence France-Presse. 29 December 2015.
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  39. Quran 47:4 So when you meet the disbelievers ˹in battle˺, strike ˹their˺ necks until you have thoroughly subdued them, then bind them firmly. Later ˹free them either as˺ an act of grace or by ransom until the war comes to an end. So will it be. Had Allah willed, He ˹Himself˺ could have inflicted punishment on them. But He does ˹this only to˺ test some of you by means of others. And those who are martyred in the cause of Allah, He will never render their deeds void.
  40. "Cleric denies UK al-Qaeda claims", BBC News, 20 January 2005, retrieved 12 December 2009
  41. Ronson 2002, p. 47
  42. Ronson 2002, p. 23
  43. Ronson 2002, p. 49
  44. Ronson 2002, p. 10
  45. ^ Omar Bakri detained in Lebanon, Al Jazeerah
  46. ^ "Banned radical cleric Sheikh Omar Bakri Mohamed arrested in Lebanon over 'links to terrorism'". The Independent. 26 May 2014. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  47. "Cleric Omar Bakri 'on the run' in Lebanon". BBC News. 2 April 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  48. Rai al Youm (29 December 2015), "Son of Extremist Islamist Umar Bakri Killed in Iraq While Fighting as Member of Islamic State" (مقتل نجل الاسلامي المتطرف عمر بكري في العراق خلال مشاركته في القتال ضمن تنظيم الدولة الاسلامية), Raialyoum
  49. David Zeidan, The Resurgence of Religion: A Comparative Study of Selected Themes in Christian and Islamic Fundamentalist Discourse, BRILL (2003), p. 294

Bibliography

  • Ronson, Jon (2002), Them: Adventures With Extremists, Simon and Schuster, ISBN 978-0-7432-2707-0
  • al-Ashanti, AbdulHaq and as-Salafi, Abu Ameenah AbdurRahman. (2009) A Critical Study of the Multiple Identities and Disguises of 'al-Muhajiroun': Exposing the Antics of the Cult Followers of Omar Bakri Muhammad Fustuq. London: Jamiah Media, 2009 ISBN 978-0-9551099-4-2

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