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Man planned to use driverless car in UK terror attack, court hears

An Islamic State (IS) supporter who was arrested amid fears of a terror plot has been found guilt...
Newstalk
Newstalk

16.36 12 Jul 2019


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Man planned to use driverless...

Man planned to use driverless car in UK terror attack, court hears

Newstalk
Newstalk

16.36 12 Jul 2019


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An Islamic State (IS) supporter who was arrested amid fears of a terror plot has been found guilty of planning an attack using a remote-controlled explosive and a driverless car.

Farhad Salah (24) was convicted at Sheffield Crown Court in England after jurors heard that he messaged a contact on social media about using an autonomous vehicle to deliver a potentially deadly device.

Writing on Facebook, the Iraqi man told them he also wanted to find someone who could help him travel to Syria, with the court told how he was a supporter of IS.

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He appeared in court with a co-defendant, Andy Star (32) who was charged with the same offence - marking the second time the pair had been tried on these charges.

By the end of the first trial last year, a jury failed to reach verdicts on either of them.

This time round, Judge Paul Watson told Mr Star, also from Iraq, that he should not face a second re-trial and a not guilty verdict was recorded, although he will remain in detention on immigration matters.

But Salah will be sentenced on July 24th, with the five-week trial having heard how he and Mr Star were in the early stages of testing small explosive devices when they were arrested during raids on their homes in December 2017.

"Very real risk"

The operation was carried out in the months after the Manchester Arena explosion and terror attacks on Westminster and London Bridge, with police fearful of a Christmas plot.

While Salah was so early in his planning stages that detectives never identified where he might be targeting, counter-terror police maintained that he was a "very real risk to the safety of the public in the UK".

Opening the case, prosecutor Anne Whyte QC told the jury: "The intention was to manufacture a device which would be placed in a vehicle but controlled remotely so that no-one had to martyr themselves in the process."

The raids on Mr Star's chip shop in Chesterfield and the Fatima Community Centre in Sheffield came three years after Salah arrived in London and applied for asylum.

His co-defendant - who always insisted that gunpowder and other items found in his flat above the chip shop were all connected to his long-standing interest in fireworks - had previously been arrested in 2008 on suspicion of being an illegal immigrant and later admitted he had arrived in the country by lorry.

Mr Star was eventually granted refugee status, with "indefinite leave to remain" in February 2016.

Salah, of Brunswick Road, Sheffield, had not had his asylum request decided upon at the time of his arrest.

He was found guilty on a majority of 10 to two after the jury deliberated for almost three days at the end of the five-week trial, and he showed no emotion as he was led from the dock.

Main image: Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Farhad Salah (left) and Andy Star (second right) at Westminster Magistrates' Court in London in December 2017 | Image: Elizabeth Cook/PA Archive/PA Images


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