Saturday 13 December 2014

UK Mother Jailed For Promoting Terrorism On Facebook

Runa Khan admitted promoting terrorism and has been jailed for more
than five years

A mother-of-six has been jailed for five years and three months for
promoting terrorism on Facebook.

Runa Khan, from Luton, had previously admitted inciting terrorism in Syria.

Khan, 35, of Maple Road West, had posted a picture of a suicide vest
and unwittingly passed details of a route into the country to an
undercover police officer.

During sentencing, Kingston Crown Court heard police had found photos
of Khan's children holding guns and swords.

Mohammed Nahin Ahmed sent details of a route into Syria to Khan, the court heard

Judge Peter Birts QC said the "only fair interpretation" of those
pictures was that Khan had intended to radicalise others.

In an interview with BBC Newsnight, she said: "I was posting up my belief."

She said the UK was "the last place I would want to live in... the
majority of people with my mindset are actually behind bars because
they don't want to stay in Britain".

Khan added when she talked about jihad she was not suggesting killing
innocent people.

She told the programme: "I have always said I don't believe in going
and blowing myself up in a shopping centre where there are going to be
innocent children.

"And when I spoke about suicide missions, I only spoke about it
because it's a much feared war tactic, which should only be used in a
battlefield, not anywhere else."

'Extreme Islamist views'

In September 2013, Khan had re-posted an article entitled "Raising
Mujahid Children", intended for Islamist mothers, the court heard.

The judge said the article amounted to "a manual in encouraging women
to carry out jihad".

Khan had also posted a message on an extremist website, saying she
wished her son would one day become a jihadi.

"I pictured the future while I was zipping up his jacket, in sha Allah
i'll be tying the shahada bandana round his forehead and hand him his
rifle and send him out to play the big boys game," she wrote.

Prosecutor Paul Jarvis said Khan held "extreme Islamist views".

Her actions were uncovered when she started speaking to an undercover
police officer, with whom she had a private conversation on Facebook.

In that message, she sent him details of a route into Syria which had
been passed to her by Mohammed Nahin Ahmed, a British man who was
jailed for terrorism offences last Friday.

When police raided her home in October 2013, they found images on her
phone of her two-year-old son wearing a turban and holding a toy
assault rifle.

Runa Khan pleaded guilty at Kingston Crown Court in July

Other pictures showed small children in Syria holding guns, and in one
case a hand grenade.

Khan's barrister, Jo Sidhu QC, described his client as "inflexible" in
her religious beliefs.

He said she was "extremely insecure, unsophisticated, binary in her
thought processes... devoid of any proper... reasonable Islamic
teaching."

Commander Richard Walton, head of the Metropolitan Police's counter
terrorism unit, said Khan had used social media as a "tool for
terrorism".

"Khan used it to spread extremism, radicalise others and justify
children being used for terrorism," he said.

"We aim to make the internet a more hostile environment for
terrorists; today's sentence supports that aim."
--BBC

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