Abdul Rahman Saleem: Difference between revisions
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Abdul Rahman Saleem was born in Iran in 1975. In 1979, his family faced discrimination for their Asian heritage following the [[Iranian Revolution]], and this sparked his interest in [[Militant Islam]], as well as his later acquaintance with Al-Muhajiroun leaders [[Omar Bakri Mohammed]] and [[Anjem Choudary]], which later lead to Saleem becoming spokesperson for Al-Muhajiroun. | Abdul Rahman Saleem was born in Iran in 1975. In 1979, his family faced discrimination for their Asian heritage following the [[Iranian Revolution]], and this sparked his interest in [[Militant Islam]], as well as his later acquaintance with Al-Muhajiroun leaders [[Omar Bakri Mohammed]] and [[Anjem Choudary]], which later lead to Saleem becoming spokesperson for Al-Muhajiroun. | ||
In 2006, Saleem attended a radical Islamist demonstration outside the Danish embassy in London to protest the fact that a Danish newspaper had published a cartoon featuring the prophet Muhammed. During the protest, he chanted various slogans calling for violence through a megaphone, leading to his arrest for attempting to provoke racial and religious hatred. He was unanimously convicted of incitement to violence and trying to incite religious hatred for this incident, as well as incitement to commit terrorism overseas due to an appearance in the radical Islamist DVD ''Night of Power'', and sentenced to three years in jail. | In 2006, Saleem attended a radical Islamist demonstration outside the Danish embassy in London to protest the fact that a Danish newspaper had published a cartoon featuring the prophet Muhammed. During the protest, he chanted various slogans calling for violence through a megaphone, leading to his arrest for attempting to provoke racial and religious hatred.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070202204534/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/02/01/ncartoon101.xml Cartoon protester guilty of race hate], The Daily Telegraph</ref> He was unanimously convicted of incitement to violence and trying to incite religious hatred for this incident, as well as incitement to commit terrorism overseas due to an appearance in the radical Islamist DVD ''Night of Power'', and sentenced to three years in jail.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7352969.stm Six guilty of terrorism support], BBC News</ref> | ||
==References== | |||
[[Category:Al-Muhajiroun Members]] | [[Category:Al-Muhajiroun Members]] | ||
[[Category:Modern Villains]] | [[Category:Modern Villains]] |