LONDON—Prosecutors in the U.K. announced charges against three men in
relation to terrorism offenses on Thursday, alleging that they were
plotting to behead members of the British public.
The charges
come amid a heightened terror alert in the U.K. and a push by
authorities to arrest and prosecute extremists, including those inspired
by militant groups such as Islamic State.
In court on Thursday,
prosecutors alleged
Nadeer Ali Sayed,
21 years old,
Yousaf Shah Syed,
19, and
Haseeb Hamayoon,
27, planned to behead members of the public. The men are being
charged with planning to commit acts of terrorism and of jointly
preparing these acts.
Dressed in matching gray robes and sporting
beards, the three men listened in court as the charges were read and
spoke only to confirm their names and addresses. They didn’t enter any
pleas. A lawyer for the men declined to comment.
The three were
arrested earlier this month, when armed police officers swooped on them
in a series of raids across West London and the nearby town of High
Wycombe.
Magistrate
Michael Snow
in court on Thursday told them they will be formally charged at
London’s central criminal court, known as the Old Bailey, on Dec. 4.
They remain in police custody.
U.K. authorities in August
increased the U.K.’s assessment of the level of the threat from
international terrorism for the first time in three years, raising it to
“severe,” the second highest on its five-point scale that indicates an
attack is “highly likely.”
The increase was prompted, in part, by
the increasing number of people returning to the U.K. after fighting in
Syria and Iraq. At that time, British Prime Minister
David Cameron
said the threat from Islamic State “is a greater and deeper threat to our security than we have known before.”
The
U.K. has recently secured a string of convictions regarding terrorist
offenses linked to the civil war in Syria, including crimes such as
training in Syrian terror camps or assisting with terrorist funding,
according to the Crown Prosecution Service. Now, the focus is starting
to shift to potentially more serious cases where people are alleged to
be plotting attacks.
Source:
Wall Street Journal
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