Yet another story about a "gentle boy & student" being arrested for being a member of an Al Qaeda cell planning a terrorist attack against innocent British men, women and children. Mohammed Ramzan was supposedly in Great Britain studying for an MBA. Ramzan is one of eleven Pakistani nationals that is tied to the Al Qaeda Easter bomb plot to blow up Manchester shopping centres.
One would expect that post Graduate education and professional positions would prove effective against muslim choosing to become terrorists - the exact opposite appears to far too frequently to be the truth as evidenced by the "bomb factory" medical doctors who tried to blow up a West End London nightclub with nail bombs. When this effort failed, they launched a suicide bomb attack Scotland's Glasgow Airport. It is appalling and frightening that three of the recently arrested Easter bomb plot terrorists actually worked at Manchester airport.
Recently it was shown that lax student visa regulations used to enter the UK from Pakistan have definitive ties to & have facilitated terrorists entering Great Britain. Thus, British Universities have become hotbeds of terror cells --with professors often shielding the perpetrators. Despite the fact that a large percentage of muslim students, in British universites and colleges, support killing in the name of Islam, ------ lecturers, etc. have refused to notify law enforcement of muslim extremists on campuses. It must be heartwarming for the British people to know that their schools of higher learning place the safety of Al Qaeda/muslim terrorists over the public.
Thus we have another planned act of terrorism - brought into Great Britain courtesy of the inept Labour government, British universities and colleges and lax immigration laws. Fortunately for all - this latest terrorist murder plot was halted prior to execution.
Also interesting ----- three more "Asian" men were arrested in Liverpool, on Easter Sunday, as part of a "dramatic swoop":
"Sniffer dogs attended the scene and a thorough search of the inside and underneath of the vehicle, using mirrors and metal detectors, was carried out.A flat, situated above a cafe just yards from where the car was pulled over, was also searched by forensic experts. Following the arrests, a spokesman said the incident was not linked to the counter-terrorist raids across the North-West." LINK
Not linked to the counter terrorist raids?? The police have got to be having a laugh and think we are dumber than a brick to swallow that statement. With the UK veritable spilling over into the sea with throngs of illegal immigrants - who law enforcement seems to regularly ignore - why on earth would these men be so important if they were not suspected of terrorism? - plus the Liverpool/Easter Sunday terror plot connection is obvious.
Let's hope those sniffer dogs were wearing booties as the British police must always be mindful to tip toe around and appease muslims - even if they could be terrorists.
Pictured: Student suspect in Al Qaeda North-West terror plot
By Caroline Grant
Last updated at 12:19 PM on 13th April 2009
Suspect: Mohammad Ramzan is believed to be one of 11 men being held after anti-terror raids in the North-West last week
Dressed in a smart suit with a neat haircut, this could be the first picture of one of the suspects involved in an alleged Al Qaeda terror plot.
Haji Hazrat Ali describes his son as a 'very humble, gentle boy and always concentrates on his studies', but he is fearful that 25-year-old Mohammad Ramzan is one of the 11 people being held after raids in the North-West.
Twelve men - 11 Pakistani nationals and a UK-born Briton - were arrested after officers raided properties in Greater Manchester, Liverpool and Lancashire on Wednesday.
One has since been released into the custody of the UK Border Agency.
Senior counter-terrorism sources believe most of the men arrested will be deported rather than charged, The Times has reported.
The family of Abdul Wahab Khan, who lived with Ramzan while they studied at the John Moore's University, have also voiced concern that their relative may have been caught up in the investigation after his name was mentioned in several newspaper reports.
Wednesday's raids were brought forward because of a gaffe by Britain's top counter-terrorist officer.
Assistant Commissioner Bob Quick resigned after the security breach when he was photographed carrying a secret document containing details of the police operation into 10 Downing Street.
Proud: Haji Hazrat Ali described his son as a 'very humble, gentle boy who always concentrates on his studies'
The families of the two men, who live in the town of Dera Ismail Khan in north-west Pakistan, said the pair were studying together at the university in Liverpool - one of at least 14 addresses stormed by armed police.
The relatives said they have been unable to reach them since the swoops were reported, and claimed they had learned of the young men's arrests through their friends.
Both families said no government officials from either country had contacted them.
Khan's older brother, Gulzar Jan, said Khan came to Britain in 2006 and was studying for a master's degree in information technology.
Armed officers took no chances when they arrested this suspect in Liverpool last week
He said Khan, in his mid-20s, was not involved in politics and spent most of his energy on his studies.
'My brother is for sure innocent,' Jan said.
'He doesn't deserve the treatment he might be getting in custody in the UK.'
Ramzan's father has asked for assistance from human rights groups and claimed that his son travelled to Britain in 2006 and was studying for an MBA.
He added: 'I firmly believe he simply cannot be involved in any negative activity.'
Officers have now been granted a further week to detain 11 of the men, who range in age from 22 to 41 and are being held in various locations across the country.
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