logo
 
The man who carried out a deadly car ramming and stabbing attack near the UK Houses of Parliament was a former English teacher working at the institution controlling Saudi Arabia’s civil aviation, a report says.
Citing a copy of Khalid Masood’s CV, Britain’s The Sun daily made the revelation in a report published on Friday.
Masood, who reportedly received his first conviction in 1983 at the age of 19, was found guilty in a string of other criminal cases until 2003, a year before he gained a TESOL certificate that allowed him to take up teaching positions in the Saudi city of Yanbu in 2005 and subsequently at Saudi Arabia’s General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) in Jeddah.
Five months after his return to the UK in



spring 2009, he started working as a “senior English teacher” at a TEFL college in Luton.
Meanwhile, the Saudi embassy in London said in a statement on its Twitter account on Friday that during his time in the Arab country, “Masood did not appear on the security services' radar and does not have a criminal record in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia."
Earlier on Friday, media reports said Masood was once investigated by MI5 for violent extremism but was discounted as a threat.
The Wednesday attack near the British parliament premises on Westminster Bridge left four people dead and at least 50 others injured. The assailant was later shot dead by police.
The Daesh Takfiri terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the attack.
No Comments For This Post, Be first to write a Comment.
Leave a Comment
Name:
Email:
Comment:
Enter the code shown:


Can't read the image? click here to refresh
etemaad live tv watch now

Todays Epaper

English Weekly

neerus indian ethnic wear
Latest Urdu News

Which political party will win the Jammu and Kashmir assembly elections 2024?

BJP
Congress
J&K National Conference