From the BBC:
“Manchester Arena bombing: Hashem
Abedi guilty of 22 murders”
The brother of Manchester Arena
bomber Salman Abedi has been found guilty of murdering 22 people. Hashem Abedi
had denied helping to plan the "sudden and lethal" blast which killed
or injured "nearly 1,000". The Old Bailey heard the pair worked
together to source materials used in the suicide blast after an Ariana Grande
show at the venue. Prosecutors said
Hashem was "jointly responsible" with his brother for the attack on
22 May 2017. The Manchester-born siblings "stood shoulder to
shoulder" in the plot, with younger sibling Hashem "just as guilty of
murder" as the bomber himself, the court heard. Hashem, 22, was also found guilty of one count
of attempted murder, encompassing the remaining injured, and conspiring to
cause explosions. He was not in court
for the unanimous verdicts after he dismissed his legal team last week and
decided to take no further part in the trial. Some of the victims' family members burst into
tears as the verdicts were delivered after the seven-week trial. Figen Murray, mother of victim Martyn Hett,
said while the verdicts bring her "comfort to know the British justice
system has played its role...it doesn't give us closure". His father, Paul
Hett, added that while "this verdict will not bring back the 22 victims
murdered by Salman and Hashem Abedi," he said it will provide "an
overwhelming sense of justice to all those affected by this heinous
crime".
Manchester attack: Who were the
victims?: Twenty-two men, women and
children, aged eight to 51, were killed in the attack while 264 "were
physically injured" and 670 more have since "reported psychological
trauma as a result of these events". Duncan Penny QC, prosecuting, said the Abedi
brothers had spent "months" planning the blast and had a "shared
goal [to] kill, maim and injure as many people as possible". The bomb
comprised a five-litre paint can placed inside a money tin, packed with
thousands of nuts and screws They worked
together to source chemicals and buy screws and nails to use as
"anti-personnel shrapnel" in experimental improvised bombs, the court
was told.The brothers used 11 mobile phones in five months - some for as little
as two hours - and used a variety of vehicles, despite neither passing their
driving test, to transport components around the city. Afterwards, police found
Hashem's fingerprints at key addresses and in a car, which still contained
traces of explosives. Although he was in Libya when the device was detonated he
was "just as guilty" as his brother, Mr Penny said. Greater Manchester Police said Hashem may have
been the senior figure in the plot, and intended to cause "further
bloodshed" around the world. The
former Manchester College electrical installation student held down a series of
menial jobs working in restaurants and takeaways, including a £5-an-hour role
as a delivery driver. He was described as "unreliable" and "with
the wrong idea of Islam" by his boss, before he left for his parents' home
country of Libya, 2,000 miles away, a month before the bombing. Hashem was
detained a day after the attack, and claimed he was subjected to torture by
Libyan militiamen before his extradition two years later. He told police he was
"relieved to be back in the UK", adding: "[I] wish to assist in
this investigation as much as I can." He then offered "no
comment" during police interviews. Det Ch Supt Simon Barraclough said
Hashem was "with his brother throughout the entire process" of making
and building the bomb and that he had taken a four-minute phone call from
Salman on the night the device went off. "At that point he (Salman) is
getting that last-minute inspiration (from Hashem)...and he's telling him what
he's about to do," he said. "I believe he provided encouragement
right up to the end. This was all about the sick ideology of Islamic State and
this desire for martyrdom." He added: "These two brothers are
literally hand in glove in this process." Following the verdicts, lawyer
Victoria Higgins - representing 11 of the bereaved families - said they were
relieved that the "calculating" killer had finally been brought to
justice. "Families have waited a
long time to see Hashem Abedi face justice for his crimes and I think the
overwhelming emotion for most will be one of relief that he cannot hurt anyone
else," she said. Sentencing will
take place at a later date but the judge Mr Justice Jeremy Baker said it was a
"little way off". A public inquiry into the bombing is due to begin
in June.
^ He clearly helped his brother with
the bombing and is just as guilty of terrorism. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-manchester-51926162
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