Friday, October 16, 2015

British schoolgirl was jailed suspected terrorist cases

jihad material
Various materials of religious violence found in the girl's mobile phone (Greater Manchester Police)

A British schoolgirl who was arrested plotters linked terror attack planners in Anzac Day parades, escaped from a prison sentence.



Young women aged 16 years old from Manchester was previously pleaded guilty to two chapters of criminal terror, among others, have a "recipe explosives," and bomb-making guidelines.

Juvenile in Manchester, she was sentenced to to 12 years of compulsory reporting to undergo a de-radicalization program.

Deep regret

Disclosed in court, the girl intended to pave the White House and obsessed with suicide bombings after radicalized through online networks.

Flanked by her mother and aunt, in court she told the judge: "I am very sorry for what I have done. I would like to change if you get a chance to prove I am not a terrorist."

bomb making material
In the ordinary notebook contained bomb-making instructions (Greater Manchester Police)

When reading the sentence, Judge Khalid Qureshi said: "It certainly is every parent's worst nightmare to have their child has access to materials that are not supposed to be, of any type."

The girl uses her school information technology system to search for information about ISIS (or a group that claims to be Islamic state), a militant known as "John the jihadists", and pictures of Michael Adebolajo, which kill military soldier Lee Rigby in Woolwich in 2013.

WhatsApp messages

Once analyzed, the mobile phone the girl found the instructions to make a circuit with a timer, bomb-making documents, and the Anarchist Cookbook 2000.

Anti-terror police arrested her with a boy 14 years in April. Both admitted to being involved in a plan to attack the police in Australia.

The boy who is now 15 years old, pleaded guilty to incitement of terrorism abroad, and sentenced to life imprisonment.

Phone data obtained showed police, the day before he was arrested, the two boys exchanged more than 2,000 messages WhatsApp.

The girl whose name can not be called pleaded guilty at a previous trial for two offenses of possession of those documents may be used to prepare or commit acts of terrorism.

Found no evidence that he was aware of the plan of attack Anzac Day, or any plan to attack others or fomenting terrorism. (bbc)
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