This would sound crazy if it wasn't the BBC we were talking about here.
The BBC, trying to put together a special on islam - pays the way for some islamists at a paintball outing so they can film them. Then, later...these islamists turn out to be wanted terrorists in the U.K., but does the BBC come forward to the police or authorities? Hell No!
Apparently the BBC was enamored by the wit and charm of the terrorists and just didn't think it would be possible these guys could be bad guys. Yeah, right.
Details from Times Online here.
The BBC, trying to put together a special on islam - pays the way for some islamists at a paintball outing so they can film them. Then, later...these islamists turn out to be wanted terrorists in the U.K., but does the BBC come forward to the police or authorities? Hell No!
Apparently the BBC was enamored by the wit and charm of the terrorists and just didn't think it would be possible these guys could be bad guys. Yeah, right.
Details from Times Online here.
BBC 'took terrorist trainers paintballing'
The BBC funded a paintballing trip for men later accused of Islamic terrorism and failed to pass on information about the 21/7 bombers to police, a court was told yesterday.
Mohammed Hamid, who is charged with overseeing a two-year radicalisation programme to prepare London-based Muslim youths for jihad, was described as a “cockney comic” by a BBC producer.
The BBC paid for Mr Hamid and fellow defendants Muhammad al-Figari and Mousa Brown to go on a paintballing trip at the Delta Force centre in Tonbridge, Kent, in February 2005. The men, accused of terrorism training, were filmed for a BBC programme called Don’t Panic, I’m Islamic, screened in June 2005.
The BBC paid Mr Hamid, an Islamic preacher who denies recruiting and grooming the men behind the failed July 2005 attack, a £300 fee to take part in the programme, Woolwich Crown Court was told.
“There are many, many British Muslims that I know who for the past 15 or 20 years have been going paintballing. It’s a harmless enough activity. I don’t think there is any suggestion, or ever has been, that it’s a terrorist training activity.”
Phil Rees, who produced the show, told the court that he was impressed by Mr Hamid’s sense of humour while looking for someone to appear in the documentary. He said: “I think he had a comic touch and he represented a strand within British Muslims. I took it as more like a rather Steptoe and Son figure rather than seriously persuasive. I saw him as a kind of Cockney comic.” Mr Rees, who now works for the Arabic TV station al-Jazeera, gave Mr Hamid a signed copy of his book Dining With Terrorists
No comments:
Post a Comment