Home Europe Man Who Planned British Military Base Attack After ISIS Radicalisation Jailed

Man Who Planned British Military Base Attack After ISIS Radicalisation Jailed

The sentencing judge said Mohammad Farooq, 29, had been inspired by Islamic State and was radicalised online.
The man jailed in the UK was radicalised by ISIS online. Photo courtesy: IBNS

A British man who had planned an attack on a military air force base in northern England with a homemade bomb using explosives taken from fireworks was on Friday jailed for nearly 40 years.

The sentencing judge said Mohammad Farooq, 29, had been inspired by Islamic State and was radicalised online.

Farooq was found guilty last July of preparing acts of terrorism following a trial at Sheffield Crown Court. He had pleaded guilty before trial to possessing an explosive substance with intent to endanger life and other offences after being arrested outside St. James’s Hospital in Leeds in January 2023.

Farooq was caught by police at the hospital, where he had previously worked as a student nurse, with a homemade bomb containing nearly 10 kg of explosives extracted from fireworks.

Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb said Farooq had originally targeted RAF Menwith Hill, a Royal Air Force base in North Yorkshire which is also used by U.S. forces.

“But having realised it would be impossible to get into a position to detonate your device anywhere closer than the well-protected perimeter, you changed tack to a softer target,” she said.


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Farooq was jailed for a minimum of 37 years in prison before he can be considered for parole.

“Farooq came dangerously close to harming innocent people,” counter terrorism police superintendent Paul Greenwood said.

Online Radicalisation

Online radicalisation, particularly involving groups like ISIS, has been a significant concern in the UK. Studies have shown that the internet plays a role in facilitating radicalisation, but it rarely acts alone. Instead, it interacts with offline influences, creating a complex web of factors.

Efforts to counter this include monitoring online activities, promoting counter-narratives, and addressing the root causes of radicalisation. The UK government and organisations like the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation (ICSR) have been actively researching and implementing strategies to combat this issue.

(With inputs from IBNS)