James Foley slaying: Britain claims 'progress' in hunt for ISIS killer
U.K. counter-terrorism agency launches appeal to Muslim communities to help flag 'aspiring terrorists'
Britain's top counter-terrorism police officer insists authorities are making "significant progress" to trace a British man suspected of murdering American journalist James Foley but won't be "giving a running commentary" on the effort.
Mark Rowley, the national policing lead for counter-terrorism, said Tuesday that arrests in Britain linked to fighting in Syria had risen dramatically this year.
Rowley's comments on the Foley slaying came as his agency launched an appeal to Muslim communities to help identify "aspiring terrorists."
"There is a lot at stake," Rowley said in a statement. "High priority operations, especially against those involved in attack planning or on the cusp have increased greatly."
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A video released by ISIS last week showing the beheading of Foley, apparently by a masked, knife-wielding man speaking English with a London accent stirred proposals for tough new laws to deal with British Islamist militants travelling to Iraq and Syria to join the jihadists.
"Every reasonable person in the country has been touched by the pitiless murder of James Foley at the hands of Islamic State terrorists, and the murderer's apparent British nationality has focused attention on extremism in the U.K. as well as the Middle East," he said in a statement.
"Investigators are making significant progress but we will not be giving a running commentary."
Britain close to identifying Foley’s killer
A number of possible identities have been suggested by British media although sources on both sides of the Atlantic have told Reuters that there was little likelihood of the British government naming the suspect imminently.
Foley's murder sparked another round of soul-searching in Britain which has wrestled with how to deal with Islamist militants at home since the Sept. 11, 2001 al-Qaeda attacks on the United States.
Since then, four young Britons carried out suicide bombings in London which killed 52 people in July 2005 while the murder last year of an off-duty soldier on a London street by two British Muslim converts has exacerbated concerns.
The government estimates at least 500 Britons have travelled to Syria or Iraq, where ISIS has seized large swathes of territory, and has repeatedly warned that those who have gone posed a serious risk on their return.
Dramatic rise in arrest rate
"The growth of dangerous individuals poses challenges for policing, especially when nearly half of Syria travellers of concern were not known as terrorist risks previously," he said, adding that the biggest growth rates in police investigations were in London and central England.
"We are appealing to the public, family members and friends to help identify aspiring terrorists. They may be about to travel abroad, have just returned or be showing signs of becoming radicalized."
Home Secretary Theresa May said on Saturday the government was looking at new laws to try to prevent Britons going abroad to fight, while London’s mayor Boris Johnson has called for those who travelled to Syria and Iraq without telling the authorities to be presumed to be terrorists.
However, the Quilliam Foundation, a counter-extremism think-tank criticized the "knee-jerk" reaction of combining law and war to combat Islamist issues at home.
"Law and war each have their respective time and place and we have already seen implementations of arbitrary rendition, detention without trial, profiling, losing the right to silence at ports of entry and exit, and occupation of certain countries," it said.
"Britain has had no shortage of these measures during war times, yet our terrorism problem globally seems to have gotten worse."