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Sunday, 8 July 2012

My husband terrorised disbelievers...

My husband terrorised disbelievers... And I will incite others': Chilling terror notes of the 7/7 bomber's widow who began life as a Home Counties schoolgirl.



Before the Terror: Samantha Lewthwaite pictured during her days as a schoolgirl in Buckinghamshire.


         





The British widow of a 7/7 bomber who is being hunted by police in East Africa has revealed that she  is raising her children to be Mujahideen terrorists.
In a chilling cache of handwritten notes found by police, Muslim  convert Samantha Lewthwaite – nicknamed the White Widow – describes how her eldest son and daughter were asked what they wanted to be when they grew up. 
The children, then aged eight and five, both said last year that they wished to be holy warriors. Their answers inspired their mother to begin a book, a guide to Jihad,  entitled I Want To Be A Mujahid.
It was their father and Lewthwaite’s first husband, Jermaine Lindsay, who carried out England’s worst  terror atrocity. During the 7/7  bombings in 2005, he killed 26 people when he blew up a Piccadilly Line Tube train near King’s Cross.
Publicly at least, 28-year-old Lewthwaite, the youngest daughter of a British soldier who grew up in the Home Counties, denounced her husband. Then she disappeared.
Nothing was known of her whereabouts until earlier this year when it emerged that she had gone on the run after police foiled a plot to blow up Western tourist targets in Kenya. Last month it was revealed she is the prime suspect for a grenade attack on a Kenyan bar packed with tourists watching the Euro 2012 match between England and Italy.  A boy was among the three dead.
Lewthwaite is believed to be in hiding with her second husband, British terror suspect Habib Saleh Ghani, who calls himself ‘Osama’ and is described by police as ‘extremely dangerous’.
When she made her ‘dua’ – a prayer to Allah for a suitable marriage – Lewthwaite writes that she asked for a man who would ‘go forth and give all he could for Allah and live a life of terrorising the disbelievers as they have us. This is what I wanted and Allah gave me this and better’. 
Copies of the notes, which Kenyan police believe were written by Lewthwaite and form the synopsis of her book, were found at the last house she rented in the Kenyan city of Mombasa. The notes, which have been obtained by The Mail on Sunday, are included in a Metropolitan Police file on the case. Last week, officers from Scotland Yard’s  Counter Terrorism Command flew to Kenya to assist in the hunt. In the papers, Lewthwaite writes: ‘It is not enough to say that I want to be  a Mujahid yet live your life as a Mujrim [non-Muslim].
 


Only once we know how a Mujahid lives his life, spends his day and night, can we strive to be a Mujahid. I have for many years now wanted to write something that would benefit my brothers and sisters. 
‘A message of hope, encouragement and light in an era when many are still in darkness.’
Apparently, she felt she lacked knowledge or was not practising  the life of a Mujahid completely, so abandoned the project.
Evidence: Documents found inside a house in Nyali, Mombasa, Kenya which had been rented by Lewthwaite
Evidence: Documents found inside a house in Nyali, Mombasa, Kenya which had been rented by Lewthwaite
Convert: Samantha Lewthwaite's dedication to Allah cannot be doubted from these documents
Convert: Samantha Lewthwaite's dedication to Allah cannot be doubted from these documents
But when she heard Ghani ‘my beloved husband’ talking to her  children, she decided to continue.
She writes: ‘He gave a talk to my eight-year-old son and five-year-old daughter. He asked them what do you want to be when you are older? Both had many answers but both agreed to wanting to be a Mujahid. 
‘He asked them how did they plan to achieve such a goal and what really is a Mujahid? What makes someone a Mujahid? These are answers that only those who have been living the path of Jihad would know.’
She adds: ‘It was my husband’s talk to the kids and then reading  A Woman’s Role In Jihad [a treatise believed by Muslims to have been written by Fatimah, Muhammad’s daughter, exhorting women to be faithful, considerate wives and to abhor cosmetics and indecent clothing] that made it clear it was time  to put pen to paper and share with others what I was blessed with.’
Lewthwaite, from Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, first emerged  as a terrorist suspect earlier this  year when she was named by Kenyan police as part of an al-Shabaab cell planning attacks in Mombasa.
Chemicals, batteries, electric  wiring and detonators had been stockpiled in several houses in the rundown Bakarani suburb. Lewthwaite’s alleged associate,  London-born Jermaine Grant, was arrested with three Kenyans, but she and Ghani fled before police arrived with arrest warrants.
Police officers in Nairobi are investigating the possibility that Samantha Lewthwaite, left, who was married to Jermaine Lindsay, right, the suicide bomber who blew up a Tube train at King's Cross in 2005, may have been part of a terrorist cell
Police officers in Nairobi are investigating the possibility that Samantha Lewthwaite, left, who was married to Jermaine Lindsay, right, the suicide bomber who blew up a Tube train at King's Cross in 2005, may have been part of a terrorist cell
Grant, whose trial starts on August 15, is charged with possessing  explosive material and conspiring to carry out bomb attacks.
After condemning her first husband in the aftermath of the 7/7 attacks, Lewthwaite was given police protection for herself and their two children. 
She disappeared for several years, only to emerge in East Africa where police believe she has acted as ‘bagman’ and fundraiser for al-Shabaab cells originating in Somalia.
She is believed to have married Ghani in a Muslim ceremony in their rented house in Mombasa, and they have a girl aged three.
She converted to Islam in her teens, when her parents were getting a divorce, and has worn the  full hijab black robes ever since. Upset by her parents’ split, Lewthwaite spent time with Muslim neighbours and reportedly found comfort in their family life. 
Later she dropped out of her degree course at London’s School  of Oriental and African Studies, having met Lindsay. He was 19 when he carried out the 7/7 attack.
Death squad: Shehzad Tanweeer, Jermaine Lindsay and Mohammad Sidique Khan with their rucksacks at Luton railway station on a dry run of a terror attack
Death squad: Shehzad Tanweeer, Jermaine Lindsay and Mohammad Sidique Khan with their rucksacks at Luton railway station on a dry run of a terror attack
Never under suspicion herself, Lewthwaite is believed to have been able to travel regularly to Somalia, where she allegedly became the banker for al-Shabaab. She was befriended by jihadists and became close to London-born Ghani, already on a police wanted list as an  al-Shabaab recruit.
In the cache of notes, she tells  how Ghani was injured before  they were married. Police believe he was hurt while carrying out  terrorist activities. 
She writes: ‘Once I learn of his injuries it only made my decision easier. Having lived a comfortable lifestyle in the West, when he  told me that choosing to marry him may mean living under a tree, not knowing reality, I agreed. This path is all I ever wanted. 
‘Until today, praise to Allah, I have not yet lived under a tree but the path we choose has its own tests and it can only be through knowledge and a strong resolve that can keep us steadfast.’ She tells of how her Muslim ‘sisters’ have been blessed to know suffering, with their husbands experiencing long jail sentences. ‘Other sisters have been blessed to be those whose husbands gained Shahadah [martyrdom]. 
‘Each has his own tests but it is our duty as women to remain steadfast and support our men. We will be  sinful if we hinder them from Allah’s work.’ She describes how her husband has left her on many occasions ‘to go out for Allah’s cause’.
Victims are remembered
Victims are remembered
‘Then there are times you don’t receive news of him for several weeks,’ she writes. ‘The not knowing if he is alive .  .  . is enough to lose appetite and sleep. 
‘But during those times I felt how can I eat if I don’t know where he is and how can I sleep when bombs are dropping on his head? But when he is home I sleep safely, eat well.’
Lewthwaite’s synopsis comprises seven chapters, including Guidance To Jihad/Islam; How We Spend  Our Time; and Life As A Stranger, in which Lewthwaite plans to describe what it means to be among your own family and friends, when even your own parents cannot know you are  a Mujahid. Other chapter titles include: Miracles On This Path and Stories of Shahadah; Advice For Those Lagging Behind; Your Reasons For Fighting; and A Woman’s Perspective, advice and stories from the wives, mothers, sisters and daughters of the Mujahadin.
Fanatic: An image of a fighter taken from the blog
Fanatic: An image of a fighter taken from the blog
Lewthwaite and Ghani, on the  run with their three children, have  been the subject of three reported sightings in the past year. They went twice through the road border between Tanzania and Kenya, before escaping the police dragnet in  Mombasa earlier this year.
There, Lewthwaite was questioned by police at a house associated with Jermaine Grant in the Bakarani area, where she showed them false passports for herself and her  children. When police returned with an arrest warrant she had left,  taking a bag stuffed with cash.
At the family home in Aylesbury, her brother Allan, 32, said yesterday: ‘It’s difficult to say whether it’s her handwriting. It’s been so long since I’ve seen it. It’s not the way I remember her speaking. This is so rambling, a lot of it doesn’t make any sense.’
He said the family were upset  to read she wanted her children to  follow her example. ‘That makes me doubt whether it’s her at all. It’s just not something I can imagine her saying,’ he said.
A stash of deadly ammunition which was recovered from the villa in Mombasa, rented by Samantha Lewthwaite
Pre-meditated: A stash of deadly ammunition which was recovered from the villa in Mombasa, rented by Samantha Lewthwaite
Chemicals for bomb making, pictured, which were found in the house of Samantha Lewthwaite
Weapons: Chemicals for bomb making, pictured, which were found in the house of Samantha Lewthwaite
Suspect Samantha Lewthwaite, pictured with a man who is thought to be fellow Briton Habib Ghani
Dedicated to Terror: Suspect Samantha Lewthwaite, pictured with a man who is thought to be fellow Briton Habib Ghani
Samantha Lewthwaite, pictured, is the widow of one of the July 7 bombers, Jermaine Lindsay
Mugshot: Samantha Lewthwaite, pictured, is the widow of one of the July 7 bombers, Jermaine Lindsay
Samantha Lewthwaite married the fanatical Muslim who would become one of Britain's first suicide bombers
Jermain Grant, pictured being taken from his cell to the courtroom in Nairobi
Turn for the worst: Samantha Lewthwaite, pictured left as a teenager, is believed to be an associate of Jermaine Grant, pictured right, at Nairobi Magistrates Court


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