Syria

An Update On The Anti-Assad Imam Killed In London

This is a cross-post by Kyle Orton

In Brent, northwest London, in the evening of April 12, a 46-year-old man was arrested as part of the ongoing investigation into the April 7 murder of the Syrian-born imam, Abdul Hadi Arwani, a long-time opponent of the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad.

Writing about the murder of Arwani last week, I noted that the available evidence suggested the motivations of the murderer(s) could be:

  • Financial: related to Arwani’s business dealings as the owner of his construction company
  • Other local or personal
  • Far-Right anti-Muslim
  • Intra-Islamist: Arwani had been the director at the Salafist An-Noor Mosque and was himself clearly an Islamist, but Arwani was against the Islamic State (ISIS), for example, which might have made him enemies among some congregants
  • Agents of the Assad regime, conceivably with the complicity of Iran and Russia

Those options still stand, but some important updates over the weekend have helped alter the relative likelihood of each.

Robert Mendick in The Telegraph provides clear evidence that Arwani’s assassins were not amateurs, whatever their motives.

Arwani had been telephoned by a man whose identity remains a mystery, and asked to provide a quotation for a building project, according to Arwani’s friends. Arwani went to meet the man at a property near Wembley Stadium on April 6. Arwani took along one of his teenage sons.

When [Arwani and his son] arrived, the man, who had two companions, apologised profusely, saying he had forgotten his keys.

He asked Mr Arwani to return the next day at 11 a.m. There was no need, explained the man, for Mr Arwani’s son to come the next day too.

On Tuesday [April 7], Mr Arwani duly parked his Volkswagen Passat in the same spot on a “blind” bend at the junction of Greenhill and The Paddocks out of sight of CCTV cameras. It is understood that when his body was discovered slumped at the wheel, the engine of his car was still running and the doors locked. The driver’s window was half open.

Other than the clear evidence of premeditation, two details leap out of this: whoever struck down Arwani wanted only Arwani dead and, to position Arwani out of sight of CCTV, the killers had some skill. Both details suggest this was a professional hit.

On April 8, Scotland Yard announced that officers from Counter Terrorism Command—known as SO15—were to head the inquiry into Arwani’s murder, rather than the homicide and major crime squad, which had initially been put in charge. This was most unusual, but the evidence here explains why such a decision would be taken.

While the terrorism angle points suggestively toward Assad and his allies, there are other possibilities.

Hussein Kesvani at BuzzFeed has been investigating Arwani’s murder, and his excellent write-up of the available evidence suggests at least two other possible directions from which a politically-motivated hit could come.

Arwani was the director of An-Noor Mosque in Acton, west London, between 2005 and (formally) 2012, though Arwani actually quit in 2011. One worshipper at An-Noor Mosque tells Kesvani that while the mosque is “Salafi,” Arwani was a “Sufi,” which in some Salafist circles, notably among ISIS supporters, is regarded as heretical. Then there are videos of people, mostly young men, converting to Islam at An-Noor Mosque. Some of the converts are white. Many far-Right “white nationalist” groups cast narratives where Muslims are seeking to colonise Western States from within; they can be assumed to take a dim view of a mosque that seeks, let alone achieves, white converts.

Arwani’s foes at An-Noor Mosque were not just ideological, but also political.

Arwani became the imam at An-Noor Mosque after the building and surrounding land were purchased in 2005 by Brickridge Ltd, owned by Burnell Mitchell, 60, a builder now known as Khalid Rashad after his conversion to Islam. Mitchell/Rashad is also a director of An-Noor Trust and de facto controller of An-Noor Mosque.

Arwani was engaged in a long-running court case with Mitchell/Rashad at the time of his murder about the control of An-Noor Mosque. The dispute seemingly centred on the financial arrangements: Arwani wanted the mosque to be registered as a charity under a board of trustees; Mitchell/Rashad wanted (and had) it as a private company. According to Mendick, the dispute between Arwani and An-Noor’s directors was “being mediated with a settlement due in the coming weeks.”

There is “no suggestion that [Mitchell/Rashad] is implicated in the murder.”

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Mendick also fills in some details about Arwani’s ideological background. In what I wrote I noted that, on the available evidence, “it seems likely Arwani was associated with the Muslim Brotherhood”. Mendick confirms this. One source told the Telegraph that Arwani “was an associate of the Brotherhood but had fallen out with its leadership in recent months. … Other friends denied this.”

Arwani also campaigned against the deportation of the hook-handed Abu Hamza al-Muhajir and Babar Ahmed to the United States, during which time Anjem Choudary claims he met Arwani. Arwani also “knew” Abu Qatada al-Filistini, one of al-Qaeda’s most important ideologues, according to Arwani’s friends, though they are at pains to stress that Arwani was against terrorism. Mendick notes that there is “no evidence” Arwani was engaged in violent activity.

Arwani arrived in London in 1995. At that time there were so many Islamists arriving in London, many of them on the run from Arab dictatorships against which they had launched failed revolutions (notably Algeria), that the French would come to call the city “Londonistan”. The Islamists who set up in London conceived of themselves as having a “covenant of security” with Britain. Having signed visa documents, the Islamists believed, they were agreeing that while they could organise and finance Salafi-jihadist terrorism from London, they would not launch any attacks inside Britain. There are signs that the British government accepted this deal, which has laid the groundwork for so much of the present trouble, including ISIS’ video-butcher Mohammed Emwazi (“Jihadi John”), who got started in an al-Qaeda network in London.