New home has more bedrooms, a bigger garden and more fittings. 51-year-old had requested a move from previous home worth £400,000
Abu Qatada has been upgraded to a larger
taxpayer-funded home since his release from jail last month, the Mail can
reveal.
The terror suspect has told relatives in his native
Jordan that he is the ‘happiest man in England’ after he was rehoused to the
more expensive property.
His wife and five children are also said to be
‘delighted’ with the move, because their new home has more bedrooms, a bigger
garden and more modern fittings.
Qatada, who was once described by a judge as ‘Osama Bin Laden’s right-hand man in Europe’, asked to switch houses a week after being freed from Long Lartin jail in February.
The hate preacher had initially moved into a £400,000
home in Wembley, North London – organised by the local authority – where his
family were said to be paying £1,900 a month rent which they funded through
benefits.
But the 51-year-old requested a move after complaints
from the property’s owner, who was furious to discover he had unwittingly
allowed the cleric to become his tenant.
Qatada’s brother, Ibrahim Othman, said: ‘He told us
they have now given him a very nice new place, bigger than the first house he
went to after the British let him go.
‘He is really enjoying his new home and so are his
family. The inside is very modern and has been done up more nicely, it has more
bedrooms and a larger garden.
‘It is better for the family. They are all very happy
in the larger house.
‘My brother cannot work so the British government fund his family to live there. The new house is costing more but he does not have to pay it because there is no way he can earn money.’
‘My brother cannot work so the British government fund his family to live there. The new house is costing more but he does not have to pay it because there is no way he can earn money.’
Mr Othman, 32, did not know exactly how much the rent
was for the new home, which is also in Wembley. He said Qatada’s new neighbours
are apparently clueless that one of Britain’s most reviled residents has moved
in beside them.
‘My brother
says nobody on their street seems to know that they have moved in. He likes
that because there is so much hatred against him in England now.
‘He just wants to be happy with his family as he is at
the moment. He wants the simple life. Right now he is the happiest man in
England.’
Under the terms of his bail Qatada is allowed to leave
the house for two hours a day, but his brother says he prefers to stay in the
property. He fills his days reading Islamic texts and watching Islamic TV
channels.
Qatada has also been keeping a close eye on the
British media reports about him, his brother said.
‘He told me he is very unhappy with what has been
written about him in the Daily Mail. He is far more pleased with the BBC which
has been much more favourable about him in its coverage. That’s what he likes
to see.’
In February, the BBC was accused of trying too hard to
be politically correct after it emerged its journalists had been told not to
describe Qatada as an extremist.
Bosses said he should be referred to as radical
instead.
Qatada was born Omar Othman but, aged 19, gave himself
the name Abu Qatada after an Islamic scholar he admired.
He was allowed to enter Britain in 1993 after
travelling on a false United Arab Emirates passport.
He later claimed asylum, despite his family admitting
there was no specific threat against him from the Jordanian
authorities at that time.
If Qatada had stayed in Jordan, he and his family would likely still be living in his elderly parents’ house in a run-down district of the capital Amman.
If Qatada had stayed in Jordan, he and his family would likely still be living in his elderly parents’ house in a run-down district of the capital Amman.
Twenty people - including 14 children - currently
share the decaying five bedroom family home.
They include Qatada’s parents, his three brothers and
all their children.
Qatada is wanted in Jordan on terror charges, but his deportation from Britain was halted by European judges.
Qatada is wanted in Jordan on terror charges, but his deportation from Britain was halted by European judges.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled that Qatada
could not be sent home without assurances from Jordan that evidence gained
through torture would not be used against him.
The Home Secretary Theresa May travelled to Jordan
this month to try to negotiate a deal that would allow Britain to deport him.
THE COST OF LETTING HATE PREACHER ABU QATADA OUT OF JAIL
The cost of keeping watch on Abu Qatada on bail is around £5million a year - a hundred times more than keeping him in a high-security jail.
The Islamist cleric is subject to a surveillance operation costing a £100,000 every week, as authorities monitor his every move to ensure he does not escape.
Police have warned the phenomenal cost of keeping an eye on Qatada is diverting money from murder investigations, and could lead to up to 12 going unsolved each year.
According to his bail conditions, Qatada must observe a 22-hour curfew which allows him out of his home for just two one-hour periods each day.
He is banned from using mobile phones and is only allowed to meet people who have been security vetted and pre-approved by the Home Secretary.
In order to enforce the tight security regime, dozens of police officers and intelligence agents have been drafted in for an intensive surveillance operation.
Every word spoken on Qatada's home telephone is monitored, recorded and analysed by an officer at a police listening station. An interpreter is on hand to transcribe conversations held in Arabic.
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