A_Wanderer
ONE love, blood, life
linkRamzi Mohammed, 25, was shown boarding the train and turning his back to a mother with a child in a pushchair before allegedly trying, and failing, to detonate a bomb in his rucksack.
Prosecutors say that Mohammed left a suicide note in which he begged Allah to admit him “to the highest station in paradise” and told his son: “We shall meet again in paradise, God willing.”
He is one of six men being tried at Britain’s highest-security court, accused of hatching an extremist plot to carry out a string of suicide bombings on the capital’s public transport system. Woolwich Crown Court also heard descriptions of the moments other alleged would-be suicide bombers tried to detonate their bombs on July 21, 2005 — two weeks after 56 people were killed in bombs on the London bus and underground system. In each case, the detonators fired but the main charge did not go off, the court was told.
“Whilst the train was in the tunnel between the stations, Mohammed turned so that his rucksack was facing the mother and child by him, and fired the bomb,” prosecutor Nigel Sweeney said. “The detonator charged but the main fire did not.
The mother and child had it coming in the rational but completely wrong mind of the bomber.