The mosque frequented by key members of the airline plot terror cell has been a recruiting ground for Islamist extremists for more than 20 years, The Times can reveal.
The Queen’s Road mosque in Walthamstow, East London, was a regular place of worship and meeting place for central figures from the group.
Abdullah Ahmed Ali, the cell leader, prayed there and met with his associates including Waheed Zaman, who lived opposite.
The mosque is currently under the control of Tablighi Jamaat, an ultraorthodox Islamic sect which preaches that Muslims should replicate the life of Muhammad and tells them it is their duty to travel the world converting non-believers to the one true faith.
Intelligence services around the world believe Tablighi Jamaat’s fundamentalism makes some of its followers easy prey for terrorist recruiters. Mohammed Sidique Khan, the leader of the London 7/7 bombers, was an adherent.
Almost without exception, the Walthamstow bombers were Tablighi followers. They sometimes went to huge Friday night gatherings in West Ham on the site beside the 2012 Olympic Park where the sect wants to build Europe's biggest mosque with space for 12,000 people to pray.
In 1989, however, before it became a Tablighi mosque, followers of the extremist preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed frequently hosted study circles at Queen’s Road.
In August that year I attended such a gathering led by Bakri Mohammed’s lieutenants, then operating under the banner of Hizb-ut-Tahrir (Party of Liberation).
The young men present told me of the evils of drink and discos, decried "free intermingling of the sexes" and preached that "God knows best because he created us".
Kysar, then 19, proclaimed a message that has become familiar and been repeated since by hardliners the world over: "Islam isn't a religion where you can only adopt part of it and only talk about that. You have to adopt the whole Islamic viewpoint on society. There can be no compromise with the divine system which has been revealed to us."
The name of al-Qaeda was not known at the time, but the ideology now associated with it - the narrative of the supremacy of fundamentalist Islam - was clearly present.
At that time Bakri Mohammed, the Syrian cleric who was one of the first men to preach jihad to young British Muslims, was the leader of Hizb ut Tahrir in Britain.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/u ... 818794.ece