- Jamshed Javeed, 30, plotted to travel from Manchester to Syria to join ISIS
- Given an extended sentence but Parole Board cleared him for mid-term release
- Officials have now confirmed he has already been released on licence
A radicalised chemistry teacher who was jailed for planning to join ISIS and due to be released from prison next month is already back on the streets.
Jamshed Javeed, 30, was jailed for six years in March 2015 for planning to travel from his Manchester home to Syria to join Islamic State.
Despite being handed an extended sentence, last year parole board officials gave the green light for him to be released halfway through his prison term in March.
But officials have now confirmed he has already been let out on licence.
It comes after terrorist Sudesh Amman was able to stab two people in Streatham, south London, last weekend after being automatically freed mid-sentence less than a fortnight beforehand.
Jamshed Javeed (mugshot pictured), 30, was jailed for six years in March 2015 for planning to travel from his Manchester home to Syria to join Islamic State. But officials have now confirmed he has already been released on licence
The Government is desperately trying to pass a new law to stop any more terrorists being freed from prison automatically by setting up a specialist Parole Board panel to review cases eligible for release.
Lawyers are gearing up to fight the proposals, set to be put before the House of Commons next week, arguing that the rules cannot be imposed retrospectively on criminals already sentenced.
The urgent legislation was put in motion after the London Bridge attack, which saw released Jihadi prisoner Usman Khan kill two Cambridge graduates in November last year.
Javeed was poised to travel to the war-torn state in late 2013 but his family hid his passport in a desperate attempt to thwart his plans.
Despite learning his wife was pregnant, the teacher - who taught 11 to 16-year-olds in Bolton - persisted with his plan after helping his younger brother make the trip.
But he was arrested hours before he was set to leave the UK.
Police discovered he had researched prominent figures such as the radical clerics Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada, as well as the jihadi group Jabhat al Nusra on the internet.
Javeed insisted he was travelling to support the people of Syria and not join the terror group when he admitted two counts of engaging in conduct in preparation of terrorist acts.
But Judge Michael Topolski QC, when sentencing the 30-year-old, said he was 'not satisfied' that Javeed had rejected 'ISIS's ultimate aims' and ruled that he posed a danger to the public in the UK and abroad.
He was handed an extended sentence of nine years, six of those to be served behind bars with a three year licence period afterwards.
At the time Judge Topolski said: 'Whether you believed you were fighting in a just cause is irrelevant. The law is clear - this was terrorism.'
When sentencing Javeed (pictured in a court sketch from his trial), the judge said he was 'not satisfied' that Javeed had rejected 'ISIS's ultimate aims' and ruled that he posed a danger to the public in the UK and abroad
He said Javeed remained 'adherent to a violent jihadist mindset', adding: 'You are in my judgment an individual whose potential danger to the public in this country or abroad is clear.'
The Parole Board said his case was 'concluded' in June last year. He has since been released.
Offenders are subject to strict licence conditions and can be recalled to prison at any point if they breach them or their risk appears to have increased, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said.
Conditions include GPS tags, internet bans, curfews, living in a bail hostel or restrictions on who they meet.
Terrorists on licence are banned from contacting accomplices or others with terror convictions and are 'closely managed' by probation, police and other authorities who share information on the risk they pose.
A target of February 27 has been set to rush the Bill through Parliament as police chiefs warned that the threat of terrorism is 'not diminishing'.
It is understood Sunderland shopkeeper Mohammed Zahir Khan is due to be released on February 28, while around five other terrorists are expected to be let out in March unless the new law is in force.
The father, originally from Birmingham, was jailed for four-and-a-half years in May 2018 for posting messages and material that was supportive of IS on social media.
Sudesh Amman wore a fake suicide belt as he grabbed a knife from a shop in Streatham High Road, south London, on Sunday, before stabbing two bystanders.
The 20-year-old had been jailed for possessing and distributing terrorist documents in December 2018, but was freed automatically halfway through his sentence less than a fortnight ago.
He was put under 24-hour police surveillance on his release after it is understood security services regarded him as an 'extremely concerning individual'.
Saskia Jones and Jack Merritt were killed by Usman Khan in November when he launched his attack armed with two knives and wearing a fake suicide vest during a prisoner rehabilitation programme near London Bridge - nearly a year after he was released halfway through a 16-year jail sentence for terror offences.
There are 224 terrorists in prison in Britain, with most thought to be holding Islamist extremist views, according to the latest published figures to the end of September.
According to official figures, as many as 50 terrorists could be freed from jail this year.
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