Thursday, January 23, 2020



    NORTH LONDON CENTRAL MOSQUE



The Finsbury Park Mosque, also known as the North London Central Mosque, is a five-storey mosque located next to Finsbury Park station close to Arsenal Football Club's Emirates Stadium, in the London Borough of Islington. Finsbury Park Mosque is registered as a charity in England, serving the local community in Islington and the surrounding boroughs of North London.[2]
The mosque gained national attention when Abu Hamza al-Masri, a radical preacher, became its imam in 1997. In 2003, the mosque was closed by its trustees following an anti-terrorist police raid, and re-opened in 2005 under new leadership
History
1988–1997: Opening[edit]
In the 1960s a small room in a guest house at 7 Woodfall Road, London N4 was used as a Prayer Room and community centre for the handful of Bangladeshi Muslims then working and living in the district, and had become inadequate for the growing Muslim community by the time the building was compulsorily purchased by the local authority as part of a Housing Action Plan. The community formed a Muslim Welfare Centre, and in 1975 purchased its own property at St. Thomas’s Road, later also acquiring neighbouring plots. A mosque first came into use on the site in 1988, when it was one of the largest mosques in the UK.[3] In 1994 a new 5-storey mosque building was officially opened in a ceremony attended by Prince Charles and King Fahd of Saudi Arabia who had contributed funds for the building.[4][5][6][7]
1997–2003: Under Abu Hamza al-Masri
The mosque rose to notoriety after Abu Hamza al-Masri became its imam in 1997.[8][9] In the late 1990s and early 2000s, he consolidated his control of the mosque, with his followers preventing anyone they did not trust from entering it.[8] According to the mosque's current administration, although originally appointed by the trustees, Abu Hamza gradually took over the mosque from them.[4] When the mosque's trustees asked him to leave, they allege that he resorted to intimidation.[10] In October 1998, the trustees went to the High Court to stop Abu Hamza from preaching at the mosque.[10] They were granted an injunction, but it was not enforced. Many trustees reported being barred from their own mosque by Abu Hamza's supporters and even being assaulted.[10] In April 2002, the Charity Commission for England and Wales suspended Abu Hamza from preaching,[10] but he continued anyway.[11] Djamal Beghal used the mosque as his "base," as he planned a foiled 2001 suicide bombing of the American Embassy in Paris.[12][13]
During Abu Hamza's control, the mosque's attendance dropped.[4][14] Most of the attendees were his followers. The mosque also became a meeting point for many radical Muslims.[15][16] According to classified American documents released by WikiLeaks, Finsbury Park mosque previously served "as a haven" for Islamic extremists who subsequently fought against allied forces in Afghanistan.[17] Al Qaeda operatives including "shoebomber" Richard Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui attended the mosque.[18] In 2002, The Guardian reported that weapons training had taken place inside the building.[19] On 11 September 2002, a conference was held at the mosque titled "A Towering Day in History" to praise the September 11 hijackers on the anniversary of the attack with the participation of Anjem Choudary, Abu Hamza, Omar Bakri Mohammed, Mohammad al-Massari and others.[20][21] In the late 1990s, Abu Hamza and the mosque became the leading international spiritual reference supporting the Armed Islamic Group of Algeria (GIA) in the Algerian Civil War, at a time when the GIA was spurned even by most Salafi-jihadist groups for their massacres of civilians.[22][23]
The United States charged Abu Hamza as a "terrorist facilitator with a global reach" in 2004; he was arrested,[8] sentenced in the UK to a seven-year prison sentence in 2006,[24] and subsequently extradited to the United States where he was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.[25] According to disclosures via WikiLeaks, several Guantanamo Bay detention camp detainees passed through the mosque prior to their subsequent activities.[26][27]
The mosque's role in facilitating terror operations during these years is often mentioned in the context of the Londonistan, which was widely used by the international espionage community to describe London, due to the liberty afforded to Muslim extremists by British Authorities.[28][29]
2003–2005: Shutdown and re-opening
In 2003, 150 anti-terrorist police officers conducted a nighttime raid on the building as part of the investigation into the alleged Wood Green ricin plot.[30][31] Police seized a stun gun and a CS gas canister, among other items,[30] and arrested seven men under the Terrorism Act 2000.[31] The police action had the effect of removing Abu Hamza and his supporters from the mosque.[32]
After the raid, the police handed the mosque to its trustees, who promptly closed it for repairs.[32] The trustees also stated that they were closing it “while it was cleaned of the physical and spiritual filth...".[33] Abu Hamza continued to preach each Friday in the street outside the closed mosque until his arrest in May 2004.[11]
In August 2004 the mosque was reopened, but after reports "hardliners" again asserted control in December 2004, the Charity Commission intervened again and appointed a new board of trustees with the support of the Muslim Association of Britain (MAB), who were asked by the police, the former trustees, and others to try to turn it around. After changing the locks and taking physical control of the building, the mosque was reopened under heavy police presence.[34][7]
Dr. Azzam Tamimi, a leading member of MAB, described the mosque takeover as "one of the very rare success stories where the Muslim community and others came together and decided to rescue the mosque", although a minority complained of lack of consultation, with Ashgar Bukhari of the campaign group Muslim Public Affairs Committee UK saying that the committee should have been elected.[3] The new management condemned former imam Abu Hamza.[4]

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