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Revealed: The terrorists we’re not allowed to deport: Foreign extremists are living freely in Britain thanks to European human rights laws

Fahad Mihy

Revealed: The terrorists we’re not allowed to deport: Foreign extremists are living freely in Britain thanks to European human rights laws

Fahad Mihyi was released in 2005 and now lives on an exclusive estate owned by a housing association

Pottering around outside his local supermarket near sought-after Dulwich Park in south London, Fahad Mihyi, 66, lives a quiet existence in the city where he mounted a murderous attack. 

In 1978, then aged 20, he lay in wait with a machine gun at the Europa hotel in Mayfair. As an Israeli airline crew walked into the lobby, Mihyi and a fellow member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine sprayed them with bullets.

One stewardess died and wedding party guests were wounded by gun shots, while a taxi driver was blown from his cab by a hand grenade.

Mihyi was given four life sentences for murder, attempted murder, possession of firearms and possession of explosives with intent to kill.

He was released in 2005 and now lives on an exclusive estate owned by a housing association.

Yesterday Mihyi took a walk in the sunshine using a crutch. He declined to comment when approached by the Mail after returning home.

Wahbi Mohammed  

Wahbi was jailed for 17 years, reduced to 13 years on appeal. He was freed in 2013 and his lawyers have since used human rights laws to resist his deportation, saying he risks being tortured

Wahbi was jailed for 17 years, reduced to 13 years on appeal. He was freed in 2013 and his lawyers have since used human rights laws to resist his deportation, saying he risks being tortured

Somali-born Wahbi Mohammed helped plot the 21/7 bombings – the failed attack designed to kill scores of commuters two weeks after the London 7/7 attacks in 2005 which claimed 52 lives.

Mohammed’s brother Ramzi Mohammed was a would-be suicide bomber but when his bomb malfunctioned, Wahbi helped him try to escape. 

Wahbi was jailed for 17 years, reduced to 13 years on appeal. He was freed in 2013 and his lawyers have since used human rights laws to resist his deportation, saying he risks being tortured.

Mohammed, 41, is registered to live in a smart semi-detached house on a leafy street in south-west London.

Yesterday the property’s smart doorbell was answered remotely by two burly men who arrived moments later in a flashy Range Rover Evoque SUV, worth £45,000.

Ismail Abdurahman

Somali-born Ismail Abdurahman provided would-be suicide bomber Hussain Osman with a safehouse from police

Somali-born Ismail Abdurahman provided would-be suicide bomber Hussain Osman with a safehouse from police

Another 21/7 terrorist, Somali-born Ismail Abdurahman provided would-be suicide bomber Hussain Osman with a safehouse from police.

A judge said that if the bombers had been caught sooner, Jean Charles de Menezes, an innocent Brazilian man, may not have been shot dead after armed police mistook him for one of the attackers.

Abdurahman, 42, refused to answer the Mail’s questions when he was approached at the three-storey terraced home he shares in a quiet tree-lined street in London’s Peckham Rye this week.

Wearing a red top and tracksuit bottoms, Abdurahman shut the door when asked about his life. A source said he would likely never be deported because it would infringe his human rights, as Somalian authorities would likely mistreat him for his crimes.

Ahmed Alsyed

Footage recovered from Ahmed¿s phone showed him posing in combat fatigues and making a hand gesture associated with IS

Footage recovered from Ahmed’s phone showed him posing in combat fatigues and making a hand gesture associated with IS

Extremist Ahmed Alsyed was given sanctuary in Britain after leaving his homeland Sudan, but had his ‘heart set’ on joining Islamic State.

Footage recovered from Ahmed’s phone showed him posing in combat fatigues and making a hand gesture associated with IS at a paintball camp in Surrey. 

Ahmed, of West London, was jailed for four and a half years in 2018 after pleading guilty to the collection of terrorist information, preparation of terrorist acts and dissemination of terrorist publications.

Now 26, Ahmed has been living in a £280,000 semi-detached house in Twickenham. He was not available for comment.

Mourad Mosdefaoui 

Mourad Mosdefaoui, 43, said he had gone three times to the Algerian consulate in London but was rejected

Mourad Mosdefaoui, 43, said he had gone three times to the Algerian consulate in London but was rejected

An Algerian terrorist living in Edinburgh said yesterday he ‘wished’ he could be deported, but claimed his homeland refuses to take him back.

Mourad Mosdefaoui, 43, who was given sanctuary in the UK in 2008 and was jailed for two years for posting vile messages in support of Islamic State, told the Mail he had gone three times to the Algerian consulate in London but was rejected. 

He said: ‘They said because of the human rights stuff [they can’t deport me], but if they can’t deport me why do they leave me like this?

‘I have no access to a dentist, or the GP, I have no work, no public funds’. 

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