A BBC investigation has said that Hafiz Saeed, the founder of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Toiba and mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, toured the UK in the 1990s to incite Muslims to become jihadis. As per the investigation, Saeed, one of the world’s most wanted terror suspects, who now heads the Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD) in Pakistan, had toured British mosques in 1995 and his visit was recorded in a magazine published by the LeT at the time.
During the tour, Saeed spoke in Birmingham where he denounced the Hindus and urged his audience to “rise up for jihad”. In Leicester, he spoke at a conference attended by 4,000 young people, according to the BBC Radio 4 documentary, titled ‘The Dawn of British Jihad’, being aired at the BBC radio since Wednesday.
“There is non-stop talk about jihad, encouraging British Muslims to join him,” Sajid Iqbal, one of the programme’s producers, told BBC. While in Glasgow, Saeed addressed a large gathering at the Central Mosque and claimed Zionists were using billions of dollars to “kill the spirit of Jihad” or the Holy War among Muslims.
“They are trying to entice Muslims to the politics of power through democracy. They are also using the interest- based economy to keep Muslims in debt,” Saeed told his audience. The documentary’s producer said he was surprised that Glasgow Central Mosque had opened its doors to a “known militant” because it is run by Deobandi, a different denomination of British Muslims to Saeed’s Ahl-e-Hadith community
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