Sunday 10 January 2016

Jihadis 'might be in Calais camp', ex police fear boss cases



The supposed wilderness camp in Calais might be a shelter for returning jihadis to "stow away on display" before "sneaking themselves" into the UK, a previous head of police counter-terrorism has said.

Amid a visit to investigate the region Kevin Hurley said he was concerned the camp was "totally un-policed".

Be that as it may, the leader of ahttp://www.telgen.co.uk/families/forum/member.php?action=profile&uid=22373 philanthropy working at the camp called his case "ludicrous".

The camp, on the edges of Calais, has developed lately and is presently home to a large number of vagrants.

Mr Hurley, the previous lead on counter-terrorism at the City of London Police and current police and wrongdoing official for Surrey, spent a few hours in the camp with BBC London's Inside Out group.

He said he was concerned the camp was "a potential covering up space" and that individuals there could be being misused by sorted out crooks.

"In the event that I were a returning jihadi, I would pirate myself in amongst this gathering; you would effortlessly get lost," he said.

Identifying with transients at the camp, Mr Hurley was informed that there were hazardous individuals staying in the "wilderness".

One vagrant said there were individuals at the camp who were "working for method for Daesh", in spite of the fact that they were not part of the jihadist bunch.

Daesh is an acronym of the beginning letters of the alleged Islamic State (IS) gathering's past name in Arabic - "al-Dawla al-Islamiya fil Iraq wa al-Sham".

Another vagrant from Afghanistan likewise told the BBC group there had been a homicide in the zone on the earlier night.

A previous Scotland Yard counter-terrorist examiner told the Inside Out group he had comparative stresses over the "wilderness".

David Videcette said the "greatest danger" from the camp was UK nationals "why should attempting maintain a strategic distance from location by police... are currently endeavoring to re-enter the nation guaranteeing to be shelter seekers".

Be that as it may, the author of Care4Calais, a UK philanthropy set up to offer transients some assistance with staying in the camp, rejected the cases as "the most silly thing I have ever heard".

Clare Moseley said: "You would needhttp://www.finehomebuilding.com/profile/mehdiidesign to be the world's most moronic terrorist to attempt and enter Britain as an exile, in light of the fact that when you come as an outcast you are liable to definite individual verifications."

Home Secretary Theresa May has already advised MPs all exiles coming to Britain will be liable to thorough security checks to ensure IS aggressors are not among them.

All things considered, Mr Hurley demanded that it was impractical to complete such point by point checks.

"You can't check a man with no travel permit originating from a broke nation", he said.

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