It unfortunately forgot to mention the name of the “outspoken” group which had been raided. It was al-Muhajiroun — a banned organisation formerly headed in the UK by Anjem Choudary and now linked to about a fifth of all terrorism convictions in Britain, including the murder of Drummer Lee Rigby. On Remembrance Sunday, Cage’s patron, Yvonne Ridley, wrote a touching piece for its website about how she’d be setting aside time to commemorate “those Brits who have sacrificed their lives, not for their country but for the plight of the oppressed. I really can’t think of anything nobler.” These fallen soldiers were Abdullah and Jaffar Deghayes, teenage al-Qaeda recruits from Brighton who died in Syria, she said, “as heroes”.