UK court finds Indian-origin man guilty of trying to join ISIS

Press Trust of India  |  London 

An Indian-origin man arrested in June 2017 on his way to join the Islamic State (ISIS) terrorist group in was on Monday found guilty of terrorist offences by a

Hanzalah Patel, from the British city of Leicester, had denied the charges but was found guilty by a jury at the end of a trial at The 22-year-old said he wanted to go to to "big myself up" and brag on returning, after taking some pictures and talking to local people.

Patel, along with accomplice Safwaan Mansur, was arrested on July 1, 2017, by West Midlands Police Counter officers as they arrived back at from Istanbul, where the Turkish authorities had executed the arrest as part of the investigation.

According to local court reports, the jury was told that Patel had told his family that he was due to be leading prayers at a mosque in but when the family contacted the mosque they were told that no-one from the UK had led prayers that month and alarm bells began to ring. Patel's father contacted the local police force in June 2017 after becoming concerned about his son's whereabouts.

It later emerged that Patel had bought camping equipment, and clothing and before travelling initially to and then onto before contacting others to arrange a crossing into

He and Mansur had broken down their journey in an attempt to evade surveillance using a mix of and public transport, they had even booked a return flight with no intention of using it, the jury heard.

Patel, along with Mansur who he had known since being at school together in Leicester, embarked on a similar trip in 2016 but returned after reaching Hatay on the Syrian border. They were forced to return home after a contact failed to answer calls, only to plan their return to Syria the following year.

The court heard that in May 2017, Mansur was in contact with a user of the encrypted messaging site Telegram who was in fact working for the to discuss crossing the border into ISIS-held territory.

When the two men arrived in Istanbul, the contact told them he would send someone to help but once they revealed their whereabouts they were arrested.

The duo was found guilty of the commission, preparation and instigation of acts of between May and June 2017 and will be sentenced on April 25.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 01 2019. 20:15 IST