BRITAIN'S youngest terrorist was behind bars today after a guide to death and explosives was found in the schoolboy's home.
Hammaad Munshi, just 16 and taking GCSEs when arrested, was part of a cell of cyber groomers that set out to brainwash the vulnerable to kill "non-believers".
For nearly a year the teenager, whose grandfather is a leading Islamic scholar, led a do
uble life.
By day he attended lessons at the local comprehensive and did as he was told.
But in the evening he spent hours surfing jihadist sites and distributing material to others as part of what the Crown branded a "worldwide conspiracy" to "wipe out" non-Muslims.
London's Blackfriars Crown Court heard it contained detailed instructions about making napalm, other high explosives, detonators, and grenades, and "how to kill".
He was 15 when recruited by Aabid Khan, 23, a "key player" in radicalising the impressionable and vulnerable here and abroad with his message of "violent jihad".
They lived 10 miles apart, phoned each other during 2005 and 2006, and swapped documents about "black powder explosives".
Khan wanted to fulfil the teenager's wish to go abroad and "fight jihad", and during one internet exchange discussed how the schoolboy might smuggle a sword through airport security.
The Dewsbury-born teenager was detained a day after Khan as he and friends returned from local Westborough High School.
The IT whizz-kid – whose online Arabic profile "fidadee" means a "person ready to sacrifice themselves for a particular cause" – ran a website selling hunting knives and Islamic flags and was the cell's computer specialist.
Two bags of ball-bearings – the shrapnel of choice for suicide bombers – were found in one of his pockets
On his PC were al Qaida propaganda videos and recordings promoting "murder and destruction".
The teenager, whose grandfather is Sheikh Yakub Munshi, president of the Islamic Research Institute of Great Britain at the Markazi Mosque, Dewsbury, also stored notes on martyrdom under his bed.
"One who is not taking part in the battle nor has the sheer intention to die is in the branch of hypocrisy," they read.
"I don't want to be a person like it has been mentioned about, I don't want to be deprived of the huge amounts or lessons Allah has prepared for the believers in the hereafter."
Khan, the schoolboy's mentor, had links with proscribed terrorist organisations Jaishe-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, and helped radicalise jailed "wannabe suicide bomber" Mohammed Atif Siddique.
Khan was returning from Pakistan – possibly after terror camp training – when detained.
The "routine stop" at Manchester Airport on June 6 2006 yielded the largest cyber "encyclopaedia" of articles promoting terrorism seized by police.
It included personal information, including addresses, of various members of the Royal Family.
Among them were the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Prince of Wales, the Duke of York, the Princess Royal, and the Earl and Countess of Wessex.
There was also a guide to killing non-Muslims, and discussions about setting up a secret Islamic state in a remote area of Scotland.
Also found were US and Canadian military training manuals, a Terrorist's Handbook, a Mujahideen Explosives Handbook, and a Mujahideen Poisons Handbook containing a recipe for ricin and encouragement for "brothers" to experiment on "kuffar" (non-believers).
Sketches of combat suits, which he dismissed as "ghetto clothing but with an Islamic theme", were in his Filofax.
Bradford-born Khan – "Del Boy" to his contacts – ran At-Tibiyan Publications, an "online extremist support network".
In one exchange he spoke of finding a "big target and taking it out... like a military base in the UK. Praise be to Allah.
"Our group is growing. We need to plan better and adapt. Now a few more people are showing interest. We need to confirm and encourage... I want to have a group of at least 12."
Another exchange read: "What I want to do is cause trouble for the kuffar with hit-and-runs everywhere, cause fear and panic in their countries, make them nervous so they make mistakes."
Operation Praline, headed by Leeds Counter-Terrorism Unit, examined a huge number of files from hard-drives and DVDs in Khan's suitcase, and identified two fellow "jihadists".
Post officer night sorter Sultan Muhammad, 23, was Khan's cousin and "right-hand man". They regularly chatted about killing non-believers and buying the explosives component acetone.
He fled to London after Khan's arrest and was arrested two weeks later near a "safe house.
Khan, who admitted being interested in jihad at 12, insisted he was in Pakistan selling mobiles and visiting earthquake victims and claimed the material police found resulted from "hoarding and curiosity".
Munshi did not give evidence, but used his barrister to also argue "curiosity".
Muhammad remained in the dock as well, suggesting through counsel the computer files belonged to others.
But the seven-woman, four-man man jury which spent six days considering the evidence, convicted them of eight Terrorism Act offences committed between November 23 2005, and June 20 2006.
Three accused Khan, of Otley Road, Undercliffe, Bradford, West Yorkshire, of possessing articles for a purpose connected with terrorism. He was cleared of a similar count.
Muhammad, of nearby Hanover Square, Manningham, was found guilty of three similar charges and one of making a record of information likely to be useful in terrorism.
Munshi, now 18, from Greenwood Street, Saville Town, Dewsbury, was found guilty of a making offence but not guilty a possession offence.
A fourth defendant, Ahmed Sulieman, 30, from south London, was cleared of three possession allegations after explaining the files found belonged to somebody else.
The full article contains 937 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.