Thursday, October 26, 2006

Son makes Hook book demand

THE terrorist son of hook-handed Abu Hamza is demanding cash to betray his evil father.
Greedy Mohammed Kamel Mostafa — convicted of plotting to blow up British and US targets in Yemen — approached The Sun to reveal he is planning a book on the Muslim cleric.
And for £60,000 he promised to reveal all Hamza’s secrets.
In an undercover operation, we secretly filmed Mostafa as he told one of our reporters what he knew. He even detailed his own role in a council house scam masterminded by his father.
Hamza, the former imam at London’s notorious Finsbury Park mosque, was jailed for seven years in February for soliciting murder and inciting race hate.
The US is also seeking the 48-year-old’s extradition. Proving his son is a chip off the old block, greasy-haired Mostafa was flanked by his "manager" as he tried to extract as much money as possible from The Sun for spilling the beans. His manager said: "It’s juicy man, when we get the money, you get the details."
We never had any intention of putting a penny in the hands of a convicted terrorist. But we played along to discover how far he was willing to betray his family for cash.
Mostafa, 25, claimed Hamza made him sign papers to get a council house in 2002 — then let out the property illegally to rake in cash from rent.
Mostafa, of Wembley, North London, claims he only found out about the scam when his demented dad threw him out. The revelation comes weeks after The Sun revealed Hamza bought a four-bedroom semi for £220,000 in cash while in jail — despite having his assets frozen.
The breach was only discovered in an investigation into the finances of his family, many of whom live in a £600,000 five- bedroom council home in Shepherds Bush, West London.
But The Sun cannot detail Mostafa’s other chilling revelations of Hamza’s violence, intimidation and fraud for legal reasons. And although he claimed he could produce evidence to back his claims, The Sun never saw any.
But speaking at two secretly-recorded meetings at a Hammersmith café, Mostafa said he was willing to sign an affidavit swearing his stories were true.
His manager, who called himself Joseph, bragged Mostafa would rake in a fortune. He also said he would make money by launching a rap career. Mostafa, dubbed MC Hamza, has already glamorised suicide bombers and Jihad in songs.
He was one of ten Muslims captured and accused of going on terror training camps in Yemen.
The group of eight Britons and two Algerians were caught when a routine search of their car revealed explosives.
Mostafa admitted forming "an armed gang to carry out a collective criminal programme".
He told a Yemeni court he had been inspired by his father’s anti-British rants. Judge Gamal Omar accepted the prosecution claim the men had travelled to Yemen to plan a bombing campaign. Mostafa was jailed for three years.
A Legal Services Commission spokeswoman said: "Our investigation into Abu Hamza’s finances are ongoing. We would be very interested in any information uncovered by The Sun

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