Monday, January 04, 2010

Hate mail Cleric

HATE preacher Anjem Choudary sparked new outrage last night - by telling the parents of British troops killed in Afghanistan that their children died in vain.
The fanatic is sending letters to the families of fallen heroes urging them to become Muslims "to save yourselves from the hellfire".

The sick campaign comes days after The Sun revealed Choudary's plan to protest in the town famed for honouring Britain's war dead.

Twisted Choudary yesterday refused to face The Sun over his sick letter-writing campaign, whingeing: "I'm the most hated man in Britain."

Cowardly Choudary tried to pretend he was out when reporters went to speak to him at his home.

He turned off his TV and fled upstairs before finally answering a call to his mobile.

He then moaned: "I'm not coming out, you're trying to demonise me."

Dad-of-three Choudary, 42 - who lives in a £350,000 home in Leytonstone, East London, on benefits provided by the British taxpayer - also chickened out of our invitation to talk to the soldiers of 3 Para.

Choudary and his supporters are provoking outrage with their plans to write to the families of British troops killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, urging them to renounce their own religions and convert to Islam.


Their sick letter tells them to embrace Islam to "save yourselves from the hellfire".

The warped rant also tells grieving parents their sons and daughters died in vain as they were tricked by the Government into fighting "a war against Islam".

Choudary first came to attention after hailing the 9/11 terrorists as "martyrs".

He has since demanded an Islamic revolution in Britain, and said Business Secretary Lord Mandelson should be stoned to death for being gay.


The letter campaign comes just days after The Sun revealed Choudary and his Islam4UK group plan to march through Wootton Bassett, Wilts, carrying coffins to symbolise thousands of Muslims killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Residents of Wootton Bassett have turned out more than 100 times in the past two years to pay their respects as the bodies of fallen British heroes are taken from nearby RAF Lyneham to a morgue in Oxford.

Deluded Choudary's letter says the march is not meant to be provocative. He even claims it has the support of some British troops' families.

But thousands of decent British citizens have expressed their outrage. A Facebook page set up in opposition to the march already has almost 100,000 members.

Moderate Muslims have urged police to stop the protest to prevent a backlash by right-wing British groups.

Wootton Bassett's Mayor Steve Bucknell said he was "dismayed" by the planned march, saying: "We will do whatever we can to persuade the authorities that it will be a very bad idea to allow this march."

Police confirmed they were aware of the planned protest and said they would take all steps necessary to maintain the peace.

Right-wing extremists have already threatened violence if the march goes ahead.

The Sun

You see it's all about the publicity and trying to stroke sectarian tensions, or god knows start a civil war.

It's possibly something Britain actually needs to happen, I might start rooting for the cleric

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