
Salman Abedi had been on the security services’ radar since the age of 15, and was known to support Isis, being linked repeatedly with jihadis in Manchester and Libya.
He had
travelled to the conflict zone several times with relatives, but the inquiry
found that both MI5 and counterterror police had “underestimated the risk from
Libya” in 2017 because of their focus on Isis fighters returning from Syria.
A
three-year inquiry into the Manchester Arena attack has uncovered a series of
opportunities that were missed by the security services.
Inquiry
chair Sir John Saunders said MI5 had missed a “significant” chance to stop the
May 2017 bombing, which left 22 victims dead, through its flawed handling of
intelligence on the bomber.
“It is
impossible to say whether any different or additional action taken by the
authorities could have prevented the attack,” he said. “It might have done; it
might not have done.”
Abedi was
not under active investigation by the time the two pieces of intelligence came
in during the months preceding the attack, though he had been flagged by an
internal trawl of previous information. A meeting to consider him further had
been scheduled for 31 May 2017 – nine days after the attack.
These were
the missed opportunities found by the inquiry:
The
information, which has been kept secret for national security reasons, was
received by MI5 in the months leading up to the bombing.
The
inquiry was told that if the Security Service were to have received the same
intelligence now, Abedi would have been subject to “low-level investigative
enquiries, in conjunction with the police”.
The report
said that an MI5 officer who drew up a report on the information “should have
provided further context”, which could have triggered an investigation.
Sir John
said the information alone was unlikely to have revealed Abedi’s plot, but
added: “There is a material possibility that it would have led to the security
service and/or counterterror police learning more about Abedi’s activities ...
this would have increased the overall prospect that the attack would have been
prevented by reason of Piece of Intelligence 2”.
MI5 received
information on Abedi on a second occasion in the months before the attack,
during the period when he was preparing his deadly suicide bomb.
The
inquiry found that it was received by the same MI5 officer who had received the
first piece of intelligence, and that the officer knew it could indicate
“activity of pressing national security concern” but did not write up a report
or discuss it with their colleagues straight away.
“S/he
should have written the report on the same day, but in fact did not do so,” Sir
John said. “[The officer] did not provide a report on Piece of Intelligence 2
as promptly as s/he should have ... the delay in providing the report led to
the missing of an opportunity to take a potentially important investigative
action.”
Sir John
said that further investigation of Abedi “should have happened”, and that if it
had, his return from Libya to the UK four days before the bombing would have
been “treated extremely seriously”.
The report
said that MI5 could have followed Abedi from Manchester airport to the parked
Nissan Micra where he stored bomb components, or he could have been stopped,
searched and questioned under counterterrorism powers at the airport.
“There is
a possibility that he had the switch for the bomb on him at that time,” Sir
John said. “The chances of a port stop on 18 May 2017 disrupting the attack may
have been low, but I consider they cannot be discounted altogether.
“In my
view, Piece of Intelligence 2 gave rise to the real possibility of obtaining
information that might have led to actions which prevented the attack. We
cannot know what would have happened, but there is at least the material
possibility that opportunities to intervene were missed.”
The terrorist had first come to be on the security services’ radar at the age of just 15, and the inquiry found that he had been radicalised by his father and older brother, by Isis-supporting friends in Manchester, by travelling to Libya during the civil war, and by Isis propaganda.
The inquiry found that authorities had considered referring Abedi to the government’s Prevent counterterrorism scheme in 2014, when he was 19 years old. The scheme is designed to use a range of measures, from ideological mentoring to mental health treatment and education support, to stop people from being drawn into terrorism.
MI5 and
counterterror police told the inquiry that the decision not to refer Abedi to
Prevent was “reasonable”, but Sir John disagreed, writing: “I consider Abedi
should have been subject to a Prevent referral at some point in 2015 or 2016.”
The
inquiry chair acknowledged that Abedi might not have “responded positively”,
and that his older brother Ismail had rejected contact from police officers who
had discovered extremist material on his devices.
But he
added: “While any particular individual will only benefit from Prevent if they
engage with it, that does not mean that a refusal to engage will be irrelevant
to those involved in countering terrorism.
“On the
contrary, such a refusal may provide an indicator to be taken into account when
any assessment of that person and their risk is undertaken.”
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