Salman Abedi
Salman Abedi | |
---|---|
Born | Salman Ramadan Abedi 31 December 1994 Manchester |
Alma mater | Salford University |
Supposed perpetrator of | 2017 Manchester bombing |
Salman Abedi was named by Greater Manchester Police as the suicide bomb suspect for the 22 May 2017 Manchester bombing which killed 22 and injured 119. Chief Constable Ian Hopkins told journalists on 23 May 2017:
- “I can confirm that the man suspected of carrying out last night’s atrocity has been named as 22-year-old Salman Abedi. However, he has not yet been formally identified and I wouldn’t wish, therefore, to comment further.
- “The priority remains to establish whether he was acting alone or as part of a network.”[1]
Abedi’s older brother Ismail Abedi, who had been a tutor at the Didsbury mosque’s Koran school, was one of four men arrested in connection with the bombing.[2]
Contents
Drugged animals
Salman Abedi was known to the security services and had just returned from Libya. On 24 May 2017, a school friend told The Times:
- "He went to Libya three weeks ago and came back recently, like days ago."[3]
Safia Aoude posted on Facebook:
- "One of terrorist leader Abdelhakim Belhadj's mentally challenged freedom warriors blew himself up in the middle of women and children in Manchester. These are the drugged animals UK and NATO stupidly gave political and military support in February 2011. And you didn't see this coming?!?"[4]
Parents back home in Libya
Salman Abedi's mother, Samia Tabbal, 50, and father, Ramadan Abedi, a security officer, were both born in Tripoli but appear to have emigrated to London in the early 1980s before moving to the Whalley Range area of south Manchester where they had lived for at least a decade. Abedi went to school locally and then on to Salford University in 2014 where he studied business management before dropping out.
A family friend told The Independent Abedi and his brother, Ismail, remained in the UK when their parents returned to Libya with the rest of the family following Gaddafi’s overthrow, but travelled back and forth to the war-torn country.[5]
LIFG links
A group of Gaddafi dissidents, who were members of the outlawed Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), lived within close proximity to Abedi in Whalley Range. Among them was Abd al-Baset Azzouz, a father-of-four from Manchester, who left Britain to run a terrorist network in Libya overseen by Ayman al-Zawahri, Osama bin Laden’s successor as leader of Al Qaeda. Azzouz, 48, an expert bomb-maker, was accused of running an Al Qaeda network in eastern Libya. The Telegraph reported in 2014 that Azzouz had 200 to 300 militants under his control and was an expert in bomb-making.
Another member of the Libyan community in Manchester, Salah Aboaoba told Channel 4 News in 2011 that he had been fund raising for LIFG while in the city. Aboaoba had claimed he had raised funds at Didsbury mosque, the same mosque attended by Abedi. The mosque at the time vehemently denied the claim. “This is the first time I’ve heard of the LIFG. I do not know Salah,” a mosque spokesman said at the time.[6]
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Importing Jihadi Terror to the UK – Cui Bono | blog post | 25 September 2018 | Craig Murray | Importing the White Helmets into the UK is obviously nuts if your purpose is to minimise jihadi activity in the UK |
Document:MI6, Theresa May and the Manchester attack | Article | 30 May 2017 | Jonathan Cook | And so the story of MI6 and Theresa May, their sponsorship of Islamic jihadism, and the likely “blowback” the UK just experienced in Manchester is a sleeping dog no one seems willing to disturb. |
Document:Manchester Alleged Suicide Bomber Linked to Libya Islamic Fighting Group | Article | 24 May 2017 | 'Tony Cartalucci' | The British government is directly responsible for the Manchester Arena bombing. It had foreknowledge of LIFG’s existence and likely its activities within British territory and not only failed to act, but appears to have actively harboured this community of extremists for its own geopolitical and domestic agenda. |
Document:Manchester atrocity: UK government must come clean about its relationship with Libyan Islamists | Article | 6 June 2017 | Mohamed El-Doufani | The perpetrator of the Manchester atrocity, British-born Libyan Salman al-Abedi, 22, is largely the product of the policy pursued by successive British governments – Conservative and Labour – towards Libya. |
Document:Theresa May's personal role in facilitating terror attacks | video | 5 June 2017 | Dan Glazebrook | Theresa May and her Cabinet are complicit in murder. They are war criminals. If the principles established by the Nuremberg Tribunal after World War II were applied, they would be hung. |
References
- ↑ "Manchester suicide bomber named by police"
- ↑ "Ismail Abedi: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know"
- ↑ "Everything we know about Salman Abedi, named as the Manchester suicide bomber"
- ↑ "Salman Abedi: One of terrorist leader Abdelhakim Belhadj's mentally challenged 'freedom warriors'"
- ↑ "Salman Abedi 'travelled to Syria and Libya' before carrying out Manchester attack"
- ↑ "British-Libyan detained by Gaddafi"