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Man charged with plot to kill British PM
By AFP - Dec 07,2017 - Last updated at Dec 07,2017
An armed police carries his automatic weapon as he walks on patrol, outside 10 Downing Street in central London, on Wednesday (AFP photo)
LONDON — A 20-year-old man appeared in court on Wednesday charged with plotting to assassinate British Prime Minister Theresa May in a bomb and knife attack.
Naa’imur Zakariyah Rahman is accused of planning an explosion outside May’s Downing Street office then trying to enter the building with a suicide vest and a knife in a bid to kill her.
State prosecutor Mark Carroll said Rahman planned to detonate an improvised explosive device at the Downing Street gates, then, in the ensuing chaos, try to enter the building “with a view to trying to kill the prime minister”.
He planned to use a suicide vest, pepper spray and a knife, Carroll told Westminster Magistrates Court in London.
Rahman had carried out hostile reconnaissance of the area as part of his preparation, it is alleged.
Rahman is charged with preparing terrorist acts and also with assisting another man, Mohammad Aqib Imran, to prepare separate terror acts.
He appeared in court alongside Imran, 21, who is accused of trying to join the terror group Daesh by trying to obtain a fake passport with a view to travelling to Libya.
The men were arrested on November 28.
Rahman spoke only to confirm his name and date of birth. He said he was of no fixed abode and said his nationality was “Bangladeshi British. I’m Bangladeshi.”
Imran said he was “Pakistani British”.
They both appeared wearing grey tracksuits. Rahman had long black hair while Imran had shorter hair and a beard.
Lawyers for the pair gave no indication of their plea on their first court appearance so not guilty pleas were formally registered.
The hearing lasted under 10 minutes.
Chief Magistrate Emma Arbuthnot remanded Rahman and Imran in custody to appear for a short hearing at England’s Old Bailey central criminal court on December 20.
The court appearance came a day after Home Secretary Amber Rudd told parliament that 22 militant terror plots had been thwarted since the killing of a British soldier on a London street by two extremists in 2013.
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