U.K.’s anti-terror chief warns of IRA-type attacks by IS on civilians

Max Hill points to high level of threat from British jihadists, who are returning from war zones.

February 26, 2017 06:32 pm | Updated 07:20 pm IST - LONDON:

In this December 17, 2004 file photo, IS terrorist Jamal al-Harith of Britain, also known as Abu-Zakariya al-Britani, is seen. Born as Ronald Fiddler and a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, Jamal carried out a suicide bombing in Iraq in February 2017. It is learnt that the IS is planning to use hundreds of British jihadists, who are in war zones, to stage indiscriminate attacks in Britain.

In this December 17, 2004 file photo, IS terrorist Jamal al-Harith of Britain, also known as Abu-Zakariya al-Britani, is seen. Born as Ronald Fiddler and a former Guantanamo Bay detainee, Jamal carried out a suicide bombing in Iraq in February 2017. It is learnt that the IS is planning to use hundreds of British jihadists, who are in war zones, to stage indiscriminate attacks in Britain.

The Islamic State (IS) terror group is plotting “indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians” in the United Kingdom cities on a scale similar to the one executed by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in the 1970s, Britain’s new anti-terrorism chief Max Hill has warned. The recently appointed Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation said hundreds of British jihadists, who are returning from war zones, pose a level of threat to the U.K. not seen since the Irish Republican Army (IRA) bombings in the 1970s.

Mr. Hill said the IS was planning “indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians on a scale similar to those perpetrated by the IRA 40 years ago.”

“I think the intensity and the potential frequency of the serious plot planning — with a view to indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians of whatever race or colour in metropolitan areas — represents an enormous ongoing risk that none of us can ignore,” Mr. Hill was quoted as saying by The Sunday Telegraph. “So I think that there is undoubtedly significant ongoing risk which is at least as great as the threat to London in the 1970s when the IRA were active on the mainland,” he said.

Over 50 were killed then

More than 50 people were killed by IRA attacks in Britain during the 1970s.

Mr. Hill, who successfully prosecuted the failed would-be bombers in 2005, praised the UK’s intelligence services’ “truly remarkable” success rate for foiling plots since the 2005 London bombings.

“It’s an enormous concern that large numbers — we know this means at least hundreds of British citizens who have left this country in order to fight — are now returning or may be about to return,” he said.

Mr. Hill is tasked with scrutinising the U.K.’s terror laws and report annually to the Parliament on the state of British terror legislation.

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