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Saturday, May 25, 2013

The British government recognizes that it can 'control' all radicals


The British security services (informational, MI5 and the police) are going to be questioned by a parliamentary committee over the murder of soldier Lee Rigby at the hands of two suspected Islamist radicals. For tilling this parliamentary inquiry , the Secretary of State for Communities, Eric Pickles, admitted yesterday in an interview with the BBC that the government has no resources nor could legally "spy, monitor, control or stop for 24 hours day " to all people at some point have expressed radical views or demonstrated peacefully for extreme political positions. The information services (MI5 and MI6 to the inside to the outside) are being criticized for failing to take any action that would prevent the death of the soldier, as the two assailants, who remain in detention and injuries in a hospital, they were signed to. "The parliamentary committee will thoroughly investigate what they knew information services and what could have have done to prevent the attack , but we can all understand how difficult it is in a free society people control all the time, "admitted the Secretary of State. The two men-one of them converted to Islam, are Michael Adebolajo , 28, and Michael Adebowale , 22. Besides ideological affinity also have identical names and similar names. Both were signed to have participated in demonstrations for radical Islamist causes. The BBC has found some images of Adebolajo in a demonstration of the Islamic extremist group al-Muhajiroun, declared illegal a few years ago at the police station in Paddington, central London, protesting the arrest of an Islamist Luton. Anjem Choudary, leader of the banned in the UK, has said that the detainee participated in the activities of the association for a while, but then stopped going to meetings. Choudary claims to have lost track while. The former head of Scotland Yard, Sir Ian Blair , has also been placed on the line of the Secretary of State, Erik Pickles, publicly acknowledging that you can not permanently monitor everyone who advocate radical or extreme positions.

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