The Super Soaraway Currant Bun began one of its occasional
attempts to take the high moral ground on Wednesday when it roped in a motley
convocation of the vain and gullible to supposedly stand “United Against IS”. Thus they would demonstrate that the Murdoch
press was “standing up to extremists”,
and not merely trying to score More And Bigger Sales Figures For Themselves
Personally Now.
However, and here we encounter a significantly sized
however, the campaign was because “Police
swoop on first suspected Islamic State terror cell in [the] UK”. As the Guardian warned
that same day, “However, some past
high-profile terror arrests have been based on intelligence that turned out to
be inaccurate, and have led to accusations that police and MI5 have ramped up
the nature of possible plots”.
But Rupe’s downmarket troops cared nothing for purveyors of
proper investigative journalism, and yesterday they doubled down, with a front
page telling “As Sun’s Anti-IS Campaign
Takes Off, Terror Suspect’s Tweet Is Revealed ... Oi Lads! I Smell War”. Well, if that’s all the Met and MI5 have
got in the locker, they are in serious shit right now. Not all media outlets
are so certain of the Tweet’s meaning.
Even
the Mail admitted “Friends of [Tarik] Hassane, whose Moroccan
mother works at a school, have defended him after it emerged he wrote ‘I smell
war’ on Twitter just hours before he was arrested. Launching a ‘Justice for Tarik’ campaign, many said it simply referred
to a ‘bunch of rowdy girls’ who were bickering on the social networking site”.
Hardly worth a Sun front page, is it,
Mr Abell?
Over at Channel 4 News, the
story was that “Hassane had
been studying medicine at the University of Medical Sciences and Technology in
Khartoum, Sudan, and commenced his studies there in September 2013 according to
his tweets ... It is unclear if he has been in Syria”. Bit of a long haul
from Khartoum to Syria. And the idea that the “plot” features someone returning from Syria is key to its credibility.
Indeed, today’s Sun front page suggests the paper is
trying to get readers to “look over there”
and away from the “suspected Islamic
State terror cell”, with “Sun Probes
Sinister IS Trade In British Girls ... I
Was Recruited As Jihadi Bride”. But what will the hacks do when the
five days’ extension of questioning time runs out and the Met have to either
convince a magistrate or release Hassane and his pals?
There were
suggestions that guns were involved: that has gone quiet. There was supposed to
have been a link to Syria: it doesn’t look as if Hassane satisfies that
criterion. There was supposed to be a beheading in the planning: no further
news has been heard on that, and if a knife had been found, one might expect
the news to leak. It’s looking increasingly like the Sun’s campaign was built on sand.
So expect the
reason it was started to be quietly forgotten. No change there.
1 comment:
Oh yes, I forgot to add that if there are similarities in the UK to those mentioned in the broadcast regarding drugs and law enforcement agencies in the US it is no wonder that the Daniel Morgan murder was never solved (or at least made public) here.
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