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Home » How gun plot on Manchester’s Jewish community was stopped | Manchester News
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How gun plot on Manchester’s Jewish community was stopped | Manchester News

By staffDecember 23, 20258 Mins Read
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How gun plot on Manchester’s Jewish community was stopped | Manchester News
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Greater Manchester Police Walid Saadaoui (right) and Amar Hussein stand on a cliff edge, Saadaoui  leans against a wooden post in the ground that holds up a fence. He wears a black jacket, white t-shirt and grey jogging bottoms. Hussein wears a brown jacket and dark grey trousersGreater Manchester Police

The pair travelled to Dover to observe security around the port prior to the weapons being brought into the country

Two men who plotted an attack to cause “untold harm” to the Jewish community in Manchester were caught thanks to an undercover operative who put himself in “significant danger” to protect the public, police said.

Walid Saadaoui, 38, arranged for guns to be brought in to the UK as part of what Greater Manchester Police (GMP) have said could have “potentially been the most devastating and deadly terrorist attack in UK history”.

Saadaoui worked together with 52-year-old Amar Hussein, and another man called Ferouk, who they believed shared the same extreme ideology .

But Ferouk was actually an undercover operative.

Greater Manchester Police Two rifles surrounded magazines on a white background
Greater Manchester Police

Two assault rifles, a semi-automatic pistol and almost 200 rounds of ammunition were found a vehicle when Walid Saadaoui was arrested

Who was the operative?

Farouk was authorised to make contact with Saadaoui after detectives linked several Facebook pages he had set up in fakes names to spread Islamic extremist views, GMP said.

“He put himself in a position of significant personal danger,” Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) Rob Potts said.

“He took risks with his life to give us the ability to protect the public.”

Farouk made contact with Saadaoui in December 2022 before the pair met in a car park in Bolton to discuss a plan to bring the weapons into the country from Europe.

“We didn’t know who he was at the time so we had to do more work to identify that individual,” ACC Potts said.

“Through that we were able to gain and understanding of his ideology, his mindset and what he was hoping to achieve.

“His role was completely crucial, it gave us the best ability to gain the evidence we needed but also to control the operation and enabled us to run it without taking any risks involving members of the public.”

Who were the men?

Greater Manchester Police Mugshots of Walid Saadaoui, Amar Hussein and Bilel Saadaoui. They all wear grey t-shirts. Saadaoui has short dark hair and a dark beard. Hussein is bald and has a short dark beard Bilel Saadaoui has short dark hair and a medium length dark beardGreater Manchester Police

Walid Saadaoui (left) and Amar Hussein (middle) arranged for guns to be brought in to the UK. Bilel Saadaoui (right) was charged with failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism

Walid Saadaoui, who is understood to have UK citizenship, was a hotel entertainer in the Tunisian coastal resort of Sousse more than a decade before he plotted the mass killing spree.

By day he joined guests, mainly Western tourists, in pool sessions of aerobics and water polo, while at night he helped stage dance shows and quiz contests.

He started a relationship with an English holidaymaker named Jane and told his trial at Preston Crown Court they lived in his home country for a year and got married before they decided to move to the UK in 2012.

Saadaoui successfully applied for a work visa and the couple moved to Clacton-on Sea, Essex, where he worked in the town’s Haven Holiday Village and was employed in its shops, bakery and arcade.

He said he saved up by working extra hours at the site for six years and in April 2018 bought The Albatross restaurant in Great Yarmouth, with the assistance of a bank loan.

His marriage had already finished earlier that year, he said, and he later met his second wife, Michelle, who was already working at the Italian restaurant, and they went on to have two children.

In 2023, he sold the restaurant and home as his family moved to a house in Wigan, Greater Manchester, which he bought in cash. In July and August of that year, he emptied his bank account with multiple withdrawals.

Saadaoui recruited fellow IS sympathiser Hussein, a Kuwaiti national, who worked and lived at a furniture shop in Bolton, Greater Manchester, to assist his plans.

Hussein told detectives he was not part of any plan and said the evidence of the undercover officer was “fantasy”.

His barrister told jurors that Hussein held “very firm opinions” about the conflict in Gaza but that did not make him a terrorist.

Greater Manchester Police Police custody image of Bilel Saadaoui. He has short black hair and a long black beard and is wearing a grey top.
Greater Manchester Police

Bilel Saadaoui has been found guilty following a trial

Saadaoui brother, Bilel was found guilty of failing to disclose information about the plans.

Bilel also worked in a hotel in Sousse and he too went on to marry an English tourist, a widowed hairdresser on holiday with her two young children.

They met in 2010 and started a relationship a year later before they married in November 2014 and moved to Hindley, Wigan.

Since 2020 he had worked as a casual worker at Pound Bargains in Market Street, Hindley.

The trial heard he was Walid’s confidant and shared his support for the Islamic State. He had a key to Walid’s safe and a copy of his will, the court heard.

On the date that Walid went to collect weapons which he intended to use in a gun attack, Bilel messaged him: “May Allah Safeguard you. If you see of them something that displease/disturb you or almost expose you, then dispense or return. This is better for you”.

Bilel has leave to remain in the UK until next September, the court heard.

What were they planning?

Greater Manchester Police A hole in the pavement floor of a shed where a grey safe has been uncovered Greater Manchester Police

Saadaoui had buried £74,000 in cash for his family in a safe in the concrete floor of a shed in his garden.

Their plan was to get the weapons and ammunition and identify a mass-gathering of Jewish people whom they could attack. They had also identified areas in Greater Manchester with a large Jewish population to attack.

In addition, they intended to kill any law enforcement or police officers who got in their way, the trial, which took place over 12 weeks, heard.

Their plans were laid bare through their communication with Farouk and, as a result, the police were able to stop those plans before they became a reality.

Saadaoui and Hussein were planning to target an antisemitism march in the summer of 2023 after an earlier gathering in January attracted 6,500 people.

He is said to have “hero-worshipped” Abdelhamid Abaaoud, who orchestrated the Paris attacks in November 2015 and allegedly aspired to emulate him.

He described the killing of 130 people and wounding of hundreds more as a “great event.”

Police said they believed Saadaoui was planning to take his own life after the attack as they had seen evidence of ‘moving on behaviour.’

The force said he had buried £74,000 in cash for his family in a safe in the concrete floor of a shed in his garden.

How were they caught?

Greater Manchester Police A screenshot of a Facebook page linked to Walid  Saadaoui Greater Manchester Police

Walid Saadaoui’s Facebook account featured a photo of Abdelhamid Abaaoud who orchestrated the Paris attacks in November 2015

The court heard that Saadaoui’s Facebook account featured a profile picture of Abaaoud.

Undercover operative Farouk said he took on the “persona” of a supporter of the so-called Islamic State group in Arabic messages that followed with Walid Saadaoui.

In one message, the Saadaoui said: “May God preserve you. You need to do what he had done.

“Make him a role model and carry out operations against the Jews and the Crusaders there and hitting them there affects them badly.”

Saadaoui is also later said to have written: “I can use a knife in the operation but this will not be enough to take revenge, only the automatic gun. I want to kill as many [as possible].

“I have an overwhelming anger. I feel sometimes I will go out and [kill] them with stones. Then I say to myself it will be a waste, I have to do many.”

Farouk replied to him: “Knife is not a solution.

“I have to endeavour the biggest number possible. This is my intention God willing.”

Prosecutor Harpreet Sandhu KC asked Farouk during the trial: “Was this part of your persona?”

He replied: “That’s correct.”

The undercover operative, who gave evidence screened from the defendants and the public gallery, added: “In this example I was mirroring what Walid had said to me previously.

“In order for me to work in this line of work you have to speak a certain way. If you don’t mirror in a certain way then he won’t tell me more about his intention.”

Greater Manchester Police A rifle that was recovered from the vehicle when Saadaoui was arrested, it is on top of tinfoil on a white backgroundGreater Manchester Police

A rifle that was recovered from the vehicle when Saadaoui was arrested

Farouk said he would arrange for the weapons to be brought into Europe and smuggle them back to England in a car on the ferry to Dover.

The men believed they were smuggling in two AK47 rifles and four hundred rounds of ammunition. Counter terrorism police said they were in control of the supply and delivery of the weapons the whole time to protect the public.

“If they’d been able to achieve what they were aiming to achieve with the weapons they were seeking to take possession of this could have potentially been the most devastating and deadly terrorist attack in UK history,” ACC Potts said.

“We didn’t allow their plans to get anywhere near to achieving that but that’s what their aim was.”

Walid Saadaoui was arrested in a hotel car park in Bolton next to the car on 8 May 2023.

The court heard two assault rifles, a semi-automatic pistol and almost 200 rounds of ammunition were found in the vehicle.

Hussein and Bilel Saddaoui, who were both elsewhere, were arrested minutes later.

Walid Saadaoui and Hussein were found guilty of preparing acts of terrorism between 13 December 2023 and 9 May 2024.

Bilel Saadaoui has been convicted of failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism.

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