LONDON (Reuters) - The family of a man suspected of hacking a
British soldier to death on a London street condemned the attack as
senseless on Tuesday, distancing itself from the murder which has
provoked an anti-Muslim backlash.
Lee Rigby, a 25-year-old veteran Of the Afghan war, was butchered in
broad daylight by two men who said they killed him in the name of
Islam.
Police shot and wounded the assailants, both Britons of Nigerian
descent, at the scene of the crime which has prompted questions about
the security services' ability to prevent attacks of this kind.
In their first public remarks since the murder on Wednesday,
relatives of one of the suspects, Michael Adebolajo, a 28-year-old
British-born convert from a Christian Nigerian family, said they felt
ashamed and horrified.
"Nothing we say can undo the events of last week," the family said in a statement.
"However, as a family, we wish to share with others our horror at
the senseless killing of Lee Rigby and express our profound shame and
distress that this has brought on our family."
Security services have been in the spotlight over what they knew
about the two men's activities, particularly after it emerged Adebolajo
was detained in Kenya in 2010 on suspicion of seeking to train with an
al Qaeda-linked group in Somalia.
Britain's ITV News channel reported that Adebolajo - who went by the
nickname Mujahid - warrior - after taking up Islam as a teenager - and
his family were approached by security services MI5 and MI6 who tried to
recruit him as an informant.
It quoted his brother in law, James Thompson, as saying Adebolajo
changed dramatically after his detention in Kenya where he said he was
tortured and felt abandoned by his government.
CHANGED MAN
"We contacted the British government and essentially, they refused
to do anything and the Kenyans were saying they were going to kill him,
behead him. We had clear proof that he was being tortured ... violently
and sexually," Thompson said.
"I would say he's always been different since then. You could almost
say he's a changed man in certain ways. He was a lot quieter and quite
bitter towards the fact that he wasn't getting any help from anyone."
Sources close to the investigation have told Reuters the attackers
were known to Britain's MI5 internal security service. Adebolajo had
handed out radical Islamist pamphlets, but neither of the two men was
considered a serious threat, sources said.
That has intensified calls for Britain's spy agencies to explain
what they knew about the suspect and whether they could have done more
to prevent Rigby's killing.
Police have arrested 10 people in connection to the murder. The
second man shot and arrested at the scene of the crime, Michael
Adebowale, 22, was discharged from hospital on Monday and moved into
police custody where he was arrested on a separate charge of the
attempted murder of a police officer.
The murder has galvanized Britain's small but noisy far-right
movement, with more than 1,000 protesters shouting "Muslim killers, off
our streets" marching through central London on Monday.
In the northeastern city of Grimsby at the weekend, unidentified
attackers threw fire-bombs at a mosque. Similar attacks happened in
southern England last week
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