Doesn’t it just warm the cockles of your familial heart? The devout family that slays together, stays together. Respect it, islamophobes!

They are allowed to wear those terror veils in court? The UK is so done.

Members of Britain’s first all-female terror cell, including a mother and daughter, have been jailed for planning a knife attack on members of the public outside the Palace of Westminster in London. The prosecution said Boular “planned to launch an attack, using knives, against members of the public, selected largely at random, in the environs of the Palace of Westminster in central London. This would have been an attack that would at the very least have caused widespread panic, but was intended to involve the infliction of serious injury and death.”

Mother and daughter jailed for terror plot BBC, 15 June 2018 A mother and daughter, who were part of the UK’s first all-female terror cell, have been jailed over a planned knife attack near the Houses of Parliament. Rizlaine Boular, 22, who was to carry out the Islamic State-inspired attack, was sentenced to life, with a minimum term of 16 years. Her mother, Mina Dich, 44, has been given six years and nine months at the Old Bailey for helping her daughter. The London pair pleaded guilty to the preparation of terrorist acts. The court heard that Dich drove her daughter around Westminster on a reconnaissance mission scouting targets. The two later went to a branch of Sainsbury’s to buy knives. The radicalisation of Safaa Boular

London teen guilty of museum terror plot Boular was shot by police when she was arrested at a flat in Willesden, north-west London, in April last year. Details of the incident were revealed in public for the first time in court. The judge was told Boular and another woman had refused to comply with instructions from police to show themselves and put their hands where they could be seen. Boular, from Clerkenwell, swore at police and moved her hand from behind a banister rail. The court heard that an officer believed he saw something in her hand and fired three shots. Boular made a full recovery but her barrister said she still had three bullet casings in her abdomen. ‘Wanted to die’ Her younger sister, Safaa Boular, 18, who lived with her mother in Vauxhall, was convicted last week of planning a separate terror attack in the area around the British Museum in central London and over an earlier attempt to travel to Syria for terrorism. She will be sentenced at a later date. The women had discussed the attack in coded conversations about an Alice In Wonderland tea party. Image copyright Metropolitan Police Image caption Safaa Boular is yet to be sentenced Passing sentence, Judge Mark Dennis QC said Dich “failed in her parental role” to stop Rizlaine Boula and had played a “significant role” in radicalising both her daughters. He told Rizlaine Boular she had planned a “wicked act” based on distorted views. Defence lawyer Imran Khan QC said Rizlaine Boular had been radicalised online after being sacked from a marketing job for wearing Muslim clothes. He said: “She knew as soon as she produced a knife in the vicinity of the Palace of Westminster police officers would swoop and kill her and that’s what she wanted at that time”. Mr Khan said Rizlaine Boular had now put her past views behind her and being shot provided a “constant reminder” of what happened. A fourth defendant Khawla Barghouthi, 21, from Willesden, admitted having information about terrorism acts and will be sentenced on 22 June. Safaa Boular’s conviction by a jury last month saw her become Britain’s youngest convicted female Islamic State terrorist. During her trial, the court heard how the then 17 year old plotted a gun and grenade attack at the British Museum.



Image caption Safaa Boular had originally hoped to travel to Syria and marry IS fighter Naweed Hussain

Aged 16, Boular had been radicalised online in the wake of the 2015 Paris terror attacks. She met IS fighter Naweed Hussain on Instagram and after three months of chatting, she declared her love for him with an online marriage ceremony. The court heard how she had wanted to join Hussain in Syria, but her plan was thwarted when British security services became involved and confiscated her passport. Safaa Boular went on to tell officers posing as extremists about plans for an attack and on 12 April, she was charged with preparing terrorist acts in Syria. Despite being in custody, she continued to talk to her sister and mother about the plans using the Alice in Wonderland coded language. Her mother and sister were arrested on 27 April 2017, the date of the planned attack, along with their friend, Khawla Barghouthi. Scotland Yard’s Deputy Assistant Commissioner Dean Haydon said: “All three women were filled with hate and toxic ideology and were determined to carry out a terrorist attack. Had they been successful, it could well have resulted in people being killed or seriously injured.” Armed officers, pictured, shot Boular during the raid in Willesden last month. She and her mother Mina Dich have appeared in court today over terror charges The trio were charged with terror offences yesterday after the raid on the house last month Boular was lucky to survive after being shot in both the abdomen and arm, the sources said. Yesterday she appeared at her mother’s side before Westminster magistrates. District Judge Emma Arbuthnot had to ask both women – who appeared in burkas which covered their entire bodies and faces – to lift their veils, as their eyes were hidden by dark mesh screens. She said: ‘Miss Boular and Miss Dich, would you mind removing at least part of your veils so I can see part of your eyes?’ Boular responded by lifting her veil for a few seconds, while her mother sat motionless and refused to expose her face throughout the preliminary hearing. +7 The mother and daughter (centre and left) were asked to lift their veils for the magistrate

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