Guernsey Press

Westminster crash suspect ‘said he was going to London for visa to visit Sudan’

Birmingham Central Mosque said members of the local community believed Salih Khater may have travelled to London for an appointment to obtain a visa.

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Salih Khater told members of the Sudanese community he was travelling to London to obtain a visa to visit his homeland, officials at a Birmingham mosque have said.

The ex-student, a keen footballer, was said to have used his own car to drive down to the capital a day before the appointment, aiming to avoid an early morning journey on Tuesday.

Birmingham Central Mosque said members of the local community believed Khater may have travelled to London for an appointment to obtain a visa to travel to Sudan.

Khater was detained after a car crashed outside the Houses of Parliament.

Speaking at a press conference, a trustee of Birmingham Central Mosque, Nassar Mahmood, said inquiries in the local Sudanese community suggested Khater did not worship at the mosque and had shown no signs of radicalisation.

Nassar Mahmood
Nassar Mahmood (Aaron Chown/PA)

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the people who have been injured and their families.”

Mr Mahmood added: “We made some inquiries within the Sudanese community around the mosque and the picture we are getting is that he was on his way to the Sudanese embassy.

“Some of them know him personally. He wasn’t known to be a fervent worshipper and as far as we know he never attended the mosque here.

“Nobody knows the true picture yet. The police have not charged him so I would caution against rushing to apportion guilt.”

Ali Mohamed
Ali Mohamed (Aaron Chown/PA)

The community leader said he was unaware of claims that relatives of Khater had died in a car crash in Sudan, telling reporters: “From what we know, he was a social person, he was a sportsman.

“He was trying to apply for a visa. We really don’t know why he got into that incident.”

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