• Campaigns
    • POMW
    • Guarding Innocence
    • Palestine Truth
    • Hold On
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • More
    • About
    • Careers
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    • Submit
    • Subscribe
Be a Guardian
Islam21cIslam21c
  • Campaigns
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • More
Search
  • Campaigns
    • POMW
    • Guarding Innocence
    • Palestine Truth
    • Hold On
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • More
    • About
    • Careers
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    • Submit
    • Subscribe

Stay Updated

Stay updated to receive the latest from Islam21c

Subscribe
Made by ThemeRuby using the Foxiz theme Powered by WordPress

Convicted teenage terrorist fined £22 after planning on “shooting up a mosque”

By Shaheer Choudhury 24 Sha 43 ◦︎ 27 Mar 22
Karl Nesh / Shutterstock

A 17-year-old far-right extremist from Wiltshire has been slapped with a whopping £22 court surcharge after being convicted of a terrorism offence. The boy, who cannot be named due to legal reasons, had planned to murder more than 10,000 people, in addition to “shooting up a mosque”. Despite being classified as a juvenile offender due to his age, the boy was spared spending a stint in a young offender institution. Instead, in addition to the £22 penalty – which is hardly set to act as a deterrent to potential copycats – the teenager has been handed a 24-month rehabilitation order. [1] [2]

The boy, who pleaded guilty to possessing material likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism, will now be required to serve his two-year non-custodial sentence. The penalty, which is formally known as a Youth Rehabilitation Order (YRO), may include requirements such as exclusion from specified locations, drug testing, education, curfew, mental health treatment, and a raft of other measures. Very few details have been provided regarding the teenager’s specific sentence composition. [2]

Explaining how the 17-year-old’s murderous intentions were relayed to authorities, a spokesperson for Counter Terrorism Policing South East (CTPSE) said that “concerned” members of the public had reported the boy. This was shortly after he had made “numerous racist comments” on online forums. The teenager was initially arrested on 18 June last year, with a search of the property revealing a handwritten note entitled “The Big Plan”. [1]

“[He] had talked about wanting to kill Muslims by ‘shooting up a mosque’. This contained details of how to make a bomb, a number of named locations and individuals who were believed to be aspirational targets, and an intention to kill in excess of 10,000 people.” [1]

The Head of CTPSE, Detective Chief Superintendent Kath Barnes, expressed gratitude to whistleblowers who had contacted the anti-terrorism hotline in relation to the boy’s threatening behaviour. Barnes said in a statement:

“I know this case may be concerning to certain members of the community who were the target of the atrocious hatred. We have seen an increase in the proportion of our investigations from the threat from extreme right-wing terrorism who wish to cause harm in our communities. We take that threat very seriously and this is why the whole of the counter terrorism community, as well as the whole of society, has a role to play in tackling it.” [1]

While Barnes attempted to console and allay fears amongst the Muslim community in Wiltshire and the South West, the fact remains that so-called Islamist offenders receive custodial sentences that are often three times lengthier than their far-right counterparts. Indeed, research conducted by the Henry Jackson Society for the years 2015 to 2019 found that ‘Islamists’ received on average 73.4 months of sentencing, compared with 24.5 months for far-right offenders. In addition, this is notwithstanding the British government’s apparent desire to view both forms of extremism in the same way. While the Henry Jackson Society is notorious for being a neoconservative Islamophobic thinktank, this particular study authored by Nikita Malik is worth referring to, as there is evidently bias within the criminal justice system. [3]

Malik stated following the 2020 report:

“The lack of far-right groups subject to proscription in the UK, when compared to Islamist groups, has left the authorities reliant on hate-crime legislation rather than specific terrorist offences which carry heftier sentences. The government needs to keep this situation under review in a fast-moving online world, where offending causes real and significant harm.” [3]

It is true that a number of far-right organisations including the commonly known National Action, the UK-founded Atomwaffen Division and Sonnenkrieg Division, and the Estonia-founded Feuerkrieg Division have been proscribed in recent years. However, such restrictive state measures have come very late in the day. [4]

When the British government announced that it would ban the neo-Nazi Sonnenkrieg Division in February 2020, the MP Stephen Doughty told The Guardian:

“This is a very welcome but hugely overdue decision. I and others – including journalists and organisations like Hope Not Hate – have repeatedly urged tough action on these sick, twisted neo-Nazi organisations for the last few years. Yet despite repeatedly meeting ministers and officials in private and raising concerns in public it has taken until now for them to be banned.

“The government need to wake up to the threat posed by these extreme right organisations – who would seek to target communities from Muslims to Jews, the LGBT community and anyone who doesn’t meet their white supremacist criteria.” [5]


Source: www.islam21c.com

Notes:

[1] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-wiltshire-59899865

[2] https://www.inbrief.co.uk/court-judgements/youth-rehabilitation-order/

[3] https://www.theguardian.com/law/2020/jan/18/islamist-offenders-get-longer-jail-terms-than-far-right-online-extremists

[4] https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-57806800

[5] https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/feb/24/uk-ban-neo-nazi-sonnenkrieg-division-terrorist-group

Shaheer Choudhury 24 Sha 43 ◦︎ 27 Mar 22 6 Jm2 43 ◦︎ 9 Jan 22
Share This Article
Copy Link
By Shaheer Choudhury
Follow:
As Head of Editorial at Islam21c, Shaheer is a regular contributor who has a passion and commitment for staying on the pulse in regards to global geopolitical and general current affairs, whilst paying close attention to the changing world conditions of Muslim populations. Prior to joining Islam21c, he developed a couple of years' experience in the health and social care sector, and previously worked as a caseworker at HHUGS. He has also volunteered at the Muslim Youth Helpline. Shaheer holds a bachelor's degree in Business Management from Kingston University. He is a Trustee of HHUGS.
Previous Article Airbnb slammed for perceived inaction on Uyghur genocide while hosting XPCC property listings
Next Article Kazakhs suffer as political turmoil engulfs nation
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

Advice for those delivering the Eid khutbah

Advice for those delivering the Eid khutbah

Khutbah
Reflections from the story of Abu Jahl

Reflections from the story of Abu Jahl

Politics
al-Aqsa cannot be absent from our Eid

al-Aqsa cannot be absent from our Eid

Khutbah
US interventions fuelled decades of war from Iraq to Iran

The war that never really ended

Politics
Show More
Facebook Youtube Instagram Telegram Whatsapp

© 2026 Islam21c | All rights reserved

Work with us

Whether you want to volunteer or be a part of our team, there are ways you can always make a contribution to the Muslim Ummah.

View vacancies

Stay connected!

We know how it feels to miss out on the latest breaking stories, exciting project announcements, and multimedia productions, so here is this handy box to make sure you don’t miss a thing! Signing up takes just 10 seconds.

Subscribe
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?