Britain's 'most hated man' ANJEM CHOUDARY convicted for ISIS support
A notorious hate preacher who led a flag-burning demonstration outside the US embassy on the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks and voiced support for jihad has been convicted of inviting support for ISIS.
Anjem Choudary, 49, has courted controversy over two decades, skirting the edges of the law, backing extremism but with no proof of actually inciting violence. He earned the wrath of Britain's tabloid newspapers, making him - by his own admission -- the country's "most hated man."
In 2014, he pledged allegiance to ISIS and its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, bringing him under scrutiny and leading to his arrest.
British authorities say they were able to link him to the battlefields of Iraq and Syria; UK police say they don't know exactly how many of the 850 Britons who have traveled there were directly influenced by Choudary, but they say he is a "key" figure in ISIS's recruitment drive.
"These men have stayed just within the law for many years," said Commander Dean Haydon, of the Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism Command.
"But there is no one within the counter terrorism world that has any doubts of the influence that they have had, the hate they have spread and the people that they have encouraged to join terrorist organizations."
ISIS pledge of allegiance
Despite his vocal support for the terrorist group, Choudary has previously insisted he is not a danger to the public. "I don't pose a threat to anyone in this country," he told CNN in 2014. "I pose an ideological or political threat, definitely."
But authorities in Britain say Choudary has been linked to the radicalization of a string of the terrorists who have stood trial in the UK over the past 15 years.
ogether with Omar Bakri Muhammad, he founded the now outlawed radical Islamist organization Al-Muhajiroun. Bakri Muhammad was later banned from the UK over links to al Qaeda.
He was pictured at a protest with Michael Adebolajo, later convicted of the violent murder of British soldier Lee Rigby, and he was linked to Siddhartha Dhar, suspected by authorities of replacing Jihadi John as ISIS executioner.
But rather than traveling to Syria himself, he has stayed in Britain - where he was born and raised -- and taken on the role of a vocal supporter for ISIS and radical Islam.
"Sometimes the propaganda and the verbal jihad is even stronger than the jihad of the sword," he says.
A jury at London's Old Bailey found Choudary (and his associate Mohammad Mizanur Rahman, 33) guilty of "inviting support for a proscribed organization" - a charge he had denied.
Under the UK's Terrorism Act, he could be jailed for up to 10 years; he and Rahman will be sentenced on September 6.
Choudary has been repeatedly in the headlines for his views.
Who is Anjem Choudary?
Choudary used to party hard at university -- where, as a young law student, he was known as Andy -- but is now a hard-line Islamist, advocating the introduction of laws based on the teachings of the Quran.
"I believe that the Sharia is the best way of life," he told CNN. "I believe that one day it will come to America and to the rest of the world."
If that comes to pass, he says: "of course, alcohol will be banned, drugs will be banned, pornography will be banned, gambling will be banned.""I believe that the Sharia is the best way of life," he told CNN. "I believe that one day it will come to America and to the rest of the world."
If that comes to pass, he says: "of course, alcohol will be banned, drugs will be banned, pornography will be banned, gambling will be banned."
He is a vocal supporter of jihad
"I preach jihad everywhere in the world but how that manifests itself is different," he told CNN while on bail in December 2015. "From here we can support the Muslims around the world. In other places Muslims are fighting."
In an earlier interview, he claimed: "The best death is one of martyrdom. I would love to die defending myself and my community, but of course death is in the hands of God; our life span will end when he decides."
Defending his own decision not to go to Syria, he explained: "My passport has been taken away ... I will continue to struggle, wherever I am."
He thinks the Islamic State is paradise
"There is peace. There's no corruption, there's no bribery, there's no usury, there's no alcohol, gambling -- all of the vices which you're used to in America and other parts of the world don't exist there."
He's an unapologetic propagandist for ISIS
"I am very proud and happy to lay the seeds of Islam in the hearts and minds of Muslim youths. There is nothing wrong with that," he insists.
"My love for Allah, his messenger, love for the sharia, love for the khilafah [caliphate], love for even jihad. This is part and parcel of Islam, however much people might demonize it."
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