- Saajid Badat
Saajid Muhammad Badat (born
March 28 1979 ) is a British student. He pleaded guilty to planning to blow-up an aircraft with a shoe bomb and was sentenced in 2005 to 13 years in prison by a British court.Saajid Badat is the child of Muhammad and Zubeidah Badat, both of whom immigrated to the UK from their birthplace in
Malawi in the 1970s. They moved toGloucester in south west England, where Muhammad found work in the Walls ice cream factory. Their first child Saajid was born atGloucester maternity hospital onMarch 28 ,1979 . He attended St James Church of England primary school, and later won admittance to The Crypt, a highly regarded grammar school in Gloucester. Teachers there describe him as mature and committed, and in 1997 he graduated with four A-levels. A committed muslim, Saajid became a Hafiz (one who knows theQur'an by heart) aged twelve. After leaving school he briefly pursued studies to be anoptometrist before deciding to study to become an Islamic scholar and teacher.His studies began at an Islamic college in
Lancashire , and from 1999 he attended amadrassa inPakistan . There, investigators believe, Badat became radicalised and came under the influence ofAl-Qaeda sympathisers. It is believed he trained in Pakistan and possibly in neighbouringAfghanistan . There he reportedly met Richard Reid and Al-Qaeda military commanderMohammed Atef . Badat returned to the UK in early 2001, but remained in email contact via "Bobu", his handler (alleged to be Tunisian footballerNizar Trabelsi ).After his return Badat, like Reid, set about obtaining duplicate passports from British consulates (court documents claim Badat was in the British embassy in
Brussels doing so onSeptember 12 ,2001 , having watched the attacks of the previous day on television). Both Reid and Badat returned to Pakistan in November 2001, and reportedly travelled overland to Afghanistan. They both were given "shoe bombs", casual footwear adapted to be covertly smuggled onto aircraft before being used to destroy them. Later forensic analysis of both bombs showed that they both contained the sameplastic explosive and that the respective lengths of detonator cord had come from the same batch (indeed, the cut mark on Badat's cord matches exactly that on Reid's). The pair returned separately to the UK in early December 2001.On their return, both maintained contact with their handler(s) in Pakistan, using a system of telephone cards and email accounts. Soon after this Badat emailed his handler, indicating he was unsure if he would proceed with the scheme. Nevertheless he booked a flight from Manchester to Amsterdam, in preparation for taking a US bound flight from there. Reid did likewise, booking a flight to Paris and thence to Miami. On
December 22 2001 Reid boarded his flight, but Badat did not, having emailed his handler "You will have to tell Van Damme that he could be on his own".Following the failure of Reid's mission and his arrest and conviction, Badat remained silent and returned to his islamic studies in
Blackburn . He appears to have cut ties with his handler in Pakistan, but kept the shoe bomb at his parents' home (the detonator under his bed, the explosive in a hallway cupboard). Acting on secret intelligence, police searched his parents' home on St James Street in Gloucester home in November 2003. There they found the concealed bomb parts (they had clearly anticipated doing so, having already evacuated more than 100 families from houses in the surrounding area) and arrested Saajid Badat. After they were allowed to return, Muhammad Badat reportedly spent several days visiting each home in the neighbourhood to apologise.On
February 28 2005 at theOld Bailey inLondon , Badat pleaded guilty to involvement in a conspiracy to destroy a US-bound aircraft. OnApril 22 Badat was sentenced to 13 years imprisonment. Delivering the sentence the judge, Mr Justice Fulford, indicated Badat's withdrawal from the plot justified a more lenient sentence, saying "Turning away from crime in circumstances such as these constitutes a powerfulmitigating factor ". Had Badat not withdrawn, the judge said, he would have received alife sentence .References
* "The Times" newspaper, March 1 2005
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/gloucestershire/4304223.stm BBC News story] of 28 February 2005
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1581004,00.html "The Times" online biography]External links
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4474307.stm BBC story on Badat's sentencing]
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