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British man guilty of handing £3k in Birmingham park to the 'man in the hat' Brussels and Paris attacks suspect | |
(35 minutes later) | |
A British man has been found guilty of giving £3,000 to a key suspect in the Brussels and Paris terror attacks. | A British man has been found guilty of giving £3,000 to a key suspect in the Brussels and Paris terror attacks. |
Zakaria Boufassil handed cash to Mohamed Abrini, dubbed "the man in the hat" thanks to CCTV circulated in the aftermath of the Belgium bombings, in a Birmingham park. | |
Testifying at Kingston Crown Court in London last week, the 26-year-old admitted meeting Abrini, and to holding money for his conspirator Mohamed Ali Ahmed. | |
Boufassil, from Birmingham, claimed he had "no idea" of its intended use, but prosecutor Max Hill QC said there was "no doubt" he passed over the cash for assisting terrorism. | Boufassil, from Birmingham, claimed he had "no idea" of its intended use, but prosecutor Max Hill QC said there was "no doubt" he passed over the cash for assisting terrorism. |
"The intention could not be more clear," said Mr Hill. | "The intention could not be more clear," said Mr Hill. |
The Isis-claimed Brussels bombings on March 22 this year, at the airport in Zaventem and at Maalbeek metro station, killed 32 civilians and the three Islamist terrorists. | |
Abrini has admitted being the man pictured wearing a white coat and black hat, and pushing a trolley laden with explosives, in the airport alongside Najim Laachraoui and Ibrahim el-Bakraoui. | |
The 31-year-old, who was arrested in April this year, is also suspected of acting as the driver for chief Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam, before the devastating bombings that killed 130 people. | The 31-year-old, who was arrested in April this year, is also suspected of acting as the driver for chief Paris attacks suspect Salah Abdeslam, before the devastating bombings that killed 130 people. |
But Abrini, a former bakery worker and petty criminal, admits he first visited a series of casinos in Birmingham and Manchester in July 2015. | But Abrini, a former bakery worker and petty criminal, admits he first visited a series of casinos in Birmingham and Manchester in July 2015. |
It was in the Birmingham park that he collected the cash from Boufassil and Ahmed, but he told police the sum was "too small" for terrorism. | |
"To carry out attacks you need lots of money," Abrini said, according to interview transcripts. | "To carry out attacks you need lots of money," Abrini said, according to interview transcripts. |
Ahmed, also from Birmingham, pleaded guilty to handing over the money last month, and Boufassil said his accomplice had taken "advantage of my naivety". | Ahmed, also from Birmingham, pleaded guilty to handing over the money last month, and Boufassil said his accomplice had taken "advantage of my naivety". |
Speaking in French through a translator, Boufassil said: "He never told me that the person who was coming to get the money was a bad person. | Speaking in French through a translator, Boufassil said: "He never told me that the person who was coming to get the money was a bad person. |
"Had I known it, I would never have kept the money." | |
As a follower of Sufism, a mystic Islamic order that is viewed as heretical by hardline militant groups, Boufassil condemned Daesh. | |
“For me, those people are worse than animals,” he said. | “For me, those people are worse than animals,” he said. |
Boufassil, who also admitted to being a regular cannabis user, struggled to remember dates and times in cross-examination. | Boufassil, who also admitted to being a regular cannabis user, struggled to remember dates and times in cross-examination. |
A jury of six men and six women at south-west London's Kingston Crown Court found Boufassil guilty of engaging in conduct in preparation of acts of terrorism. | |
Assistant Chief Constable Marcus Beale, counter terrorism lead for West Midlands Police, said: "The conviction of these two men is significant for the UK as it identified a dangerous link to Abrini and Abaaoud. | |
"Their conviction sends a clear message to those who fund terrorism will be prosecuted and potentially face lengthy prison sentences. | |
"We know that Abrini visited several locations during his visit to the UK, but that his sole purpose of being here was to collect the money and our case - whilst not focused on attack planning - acts as a reminder of why our work to prepare for and prevent such incidents in the UK is important." |