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IS Supporter Given Life Sentence For Murder Of MP Amess, Friend Of The Jewish Community

In this Friday, Oct. 15, 2021 file photo, an image of murdered British Conservative lawmaker David Amess is displayed near the altar in St Peters Catholic Church before a vigil in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, England. A jury deliberated for just 18 minutes Monday before finding a fervent Islamic State supporter guilty of stabbing lawmaker David Amess to death a slaying that shocked the nation and sparked calls for increased police protection for politicians. Ali Harbi Ali, 26, was found guilty by London’s Central Criminal Court of murder and preparing terrorist acts. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali, File)

An Islamic State supporter was given a whole-life sentence Wednesday for stabbing a British lawmaker to death in revenge for his voting in support for airstrikes on Syria.

Ali Harbi Ali, 26, was convicted Monday of murdering Conservative lawmaker David Amess and preparing terrorist acts. A jury deliberated for just 18 minutes before finding him guilty.

“The defendant has no remorse or shame for what he has done — quite the reverse,” Justice Nigel Sweeney told the court. “This is a murder that struck at the heart of democracy.”

Ali stabbed Amess with a carving knife multiple times on Oct.15 while he was meeting with voters at a church hall in the town of Leigh-on-Sea in eastern England. Ali, a London man with Somali heritage, said he targeted Amess because he backed voting for airstrikes on Syria in 2014 and 2015.

Amess was a close friend of the Jewish people and Israel, serving as the honorary secretary of Conservative Friends of Israel and attending a number of events in the Jewish community, including the Chareidi community. He was also an active supporter of the Holocaust Educational Trust.

The Jewish Chronicle reported that beginning in the 1980s, Amess campaigned for the erection of a statue honoring Raoul Wallenberg. He eventually succeeded and the statue was unveiled in 1997 by Queen Elizabeth outside the Western Marble Arch Synagogue.

During a discussion (via teleconference) in the Parliament on the occasion of Holocaust Remembrance Day last January, Amess spoke out against anti-Semitism and said that he would have been proud to have been born a Jew.

The whole-life sentence means Ali will never be eligible for parole, and will likely spend the rest of his days in prison.

Amess’s family said “there is no elation” following the sentencing and described the crime as “beyond evil.”

“We will wake each day and immediately feel our loss. We will struggle through each day for the rest of our lives,” the family said in a statement. “It breaks our heart to know that our husband and father would have greeted the murderer with a smile of friendship and would have been anxious to help.”

Prosecutors described Ali as a committed, fanatical terrorist and said he spent years plotting an attack on British politicians. Counter-terrorism officers at the Metropolitan Police said they had evidence that he carried out reconnaissance around the Parliament building in London weeks before the murder.

During the trial, Ali told the court he took action in the U.K. to help Muslims in Syria because he couldn’t travel to join the Islamic State group. He also said he did not think he did anything wrong.

He added he had expected to be shot and die at the scene, but decided to drop his knife after seeing that the first police to arrive were not armed with guns.

Amess, 69, had been a member of Parliament since 1983. He was pronounced dead at the scene after the stabbing.

The slaying of Amess shook the nation, as lawmakers often meet directly with the public. It came five years after Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox was shot and stabbed to death by a far-right extremist.

(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem & AP)



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