The so-called British Muslim bomb-maker triggered laptop ban on flights

The so-called British Muslim bomb-maker triggered laptop ban on flights

A British terrorist known as a “master bomb-maker” for the Daesh (ISIS) triggered the U.S. laptop ban on flights last year, a former MI6 spy has revealed in a new autobiography.

41-year-old Hamayun Tariq plotted to smuggle bombs “disguised as laptop batteries” claims Aimen Dean, a former al-Qaeda explosives expert recruited by secret services to infiltrate UK jihadist circles, The Sunday Times reports.

According to Dean, the terrorist twice evaded British authorities to travel abroad, and is now thought to be creating bombs to attach to drones that can strike football stadiums and other large public events.

The radical Islamic extremist, who used the alias “Abu Muslim,” is described as a “psychopath” and possibly the most accomplished terrorist to emerge from the United Kingdom. He previously worked as a car mechanic.

While still living in Britain, he allegedly plotted to kill wealthy people in retaliation for the Iraq War, by smearing poisonous nicotine on car door handles.

“It’s time to hurt the kuffar [non-Muslims] for what they are doing in Iraq. Let’s go for the f****** rich pricks: Ferraris, Bentleys, Jaguars and Mercedes. If 10 or 20 dirty kuffar drop dead, it’ll drive the price of the cars down and insurance up,” Tariq asked Dean, working undercover at the time.

Fortunately, the plot was foiled when Tariq and two alleged accomplices were arrested for fraud offenses.

However, he skipped bail and fled to Pakistan, where he is thought to have trained under al-Qaeda’s leading bomb maker.

In 2007 he was arrested in Pakistan, deported back to Britain, and jailed for the earlier fraud offense.

After serving the sentence, authorities allowed him to leave the country once again, only for him to resurface later in Syria, where he is said to have joined the ISIS.

Tariq had boasted about his terrorist activities on social media, but only now has the extent of his ability and the threat he posed been reported.

Until 2015, he was a prolific Twitter user, posting threats to the UK while also tweeting a picture of his bomb-making workshop in the war-torn country.

He later went into hiding following drone strikes targeting British fighters.

In May 2017, it emerged Tariq may have trained Manchester bomber Salman Abedi.

US officials said the Manchester bomb is similar in design to those built by a Belgium jihadist called Najim Laachraoui, who worked alongside Tariq in ISIS bomb factories in Raqqa.

Source: Abna 24