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Islamic extremist jailed for terror offences had waged campaign of hate against London's Jewish community

New CST report reveals full scale of Ilford carpet-fitter Shehroz Iqbal’s antisemitic activities ahead of his sentencing at the Old Bailey for terrorism offences

December 9, 2020 09:23
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5 min read

An Islamic extremist jailed for more than eight years at the Old Bailey last month after sharing terrorist material online had waged a four year long campaign of hate against London’s Jewish community.

A new report from the Community Security Trust (CST) has detailed the full extent of Shehroz Iqbal’s antisemitic activities ahead of his sentencing for two terrorism offences - posting an Islamic State propaganda video on his Facebook page, and making and sharing a video of himself outside the Hayward Gallery in central London while saying “attack, attack”.

The CST’s briefing document also urges the community to recognise that they should not “treat verbal abuse or antisemitic posters in local communities as somehow less important than racist violence or other forms of hate crime.”

Following the Ilford carpet-fitter’s  conviction, Commander Richard Smith, Head of the Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terrorism Command, said Mr Iqbal was “a volatile man with an extremist mind-set” and claimed that his arrest “prevent[ed] him from carrying out something far more harmful.”