LONDON
(AFP) – A man accused of hacking a soldier to death on a London street
told police he was a “soldier of Allah” fighting a war against Britain
but that the killing brought him little joy, a court heard Wednesday.
File: This photo taken on November 23, 2010 shows Michael Adebolajo (C) among the nine suspected members of the Al-Shabaab Movement arrested by Kenyan police on November 22 on claims of being Al-Shabaab recruits on their way to Somalia at the weekend. AFP photo |
Michael Adebolajo, who is on trial with Michael Adebowale for the brutal
murder of Lee Rigby near his barracks in the south London district of
Woolwich in May, made the comments during interviews with police after
his arrest.
Adebolajo has been asked to be referred to as Mujaahid Abu Hamza in court.
In recordings of the interviews shown to the jury at the Old Bailey
criminal court in London, 28-year-old Adebolajo blamed his actions on
“wicked” leaders such as Prime Minister David Cameron and his
predecessor Tony Blair.
Asked by detectives to describe the killing, during which the two men
allegedly hit Rigby with a car before attacking him with knives,
Adebolajo said the soldier’s head was “almost detached and may Allah
forgive me if I acted in a way that is displeasing to him”.
In another interview, during which he had a blue blanket over his head,
Adebolajo said the killing was “for those people who have not yet
understood the nature, the nature of the war that’s ongoing and has been
ongoing for some many years between the Muslims and the British
people”.
He went on: “Your leaders, you have leaders who rule over you,
unfortunately they rule over you in a very wicked, corrupt, selfish and
oppressive manner.”
Adebolajo said he was “particularly disgusted by David Cameron, the
Miliband brothers and what’s-his-name, Nick Clegg”, referring to
opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband, his brother David, and Liberal
Democrat Deputy Prime Minister Clegg.
He also spoke of the “wickedness and corruption” of Blair, who took
Britain in to the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Cameron, he said, was
“trying to emulate the footsteps of Tony Blair as if he worships him”.
But he added that it brought him “little joy to approach anybody and slay them”.
Rigby’s widow Rebecca left the court in tears as the interviews were played.
A psychiatrist’s report read to the court earlier on Wednesday found that Adebolajo showed “no regret or remorse”.
Adebolajo and 22-year-old Adebowale both deny murder.Source
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