Guernsey Press

Foster carers of Parsons Green bomber suing Surrey County Council

Iraqi teenage asylum seeker Ahmed Hassan was sentenced to life with a minimum term of 34 years.

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The foster carers of the Parsons Green bomber are taking legal action against the council that placed him in their home.

Iraqi teenage asylum seeker Ahmed Hassan, who pretended to engage with the anti-terrorism Prevent scheme as he plotted mass murder in London, was sentenced to life with a minimum term of 34 years at the Old Bailey last year.

Hassan’s foster parents Penny and Ron Jones, who were awarded an MBE in 2010, are suing Surrey County Council, claiming that the council presented him “merely as a troubled young person” and did not disclose key information about the danger he posed.

The teenager, who lived in Sunbury, Surrey, made a bomb with 400g of “Mother of Satan” explosives and 2.2kg of shrapnel while his unsuspecting foster carers were on holiday in Blackpool.

The bomb injured 51 passengers on September 15 2017.

His trial heard how Hassan arrived in Britain illegally in 2015 and told officials he had trained with Islamic State (IS).

Ahmed Hassan on a train to Brighton
Ahmed Hassan on a train to Brighton (Metropolitan Police/PA)

Mrs Jones, 72, said: “We want to make sure that no other foster carers are ever treated like we have been.”

The couple are claiming that the council was negligent in not telling them the full story about Hassan’s past and that they breached their right to family life as protected under the Human Rights Act.

Mrs Jones said: “They told me that he had tried to kill himself and would only be released if he was fostered into a stable home so we took him in.

“On the surface he was a lovely boy. He wouldn’t let Ron mow the lawn and he would always carry the shopping in from the car. So when it came out he was building a bomb in our home it was a real shock.”

Mr Jones said: “We were told that the amount of explosives he had was enough to blow up this entire block of six houses. It’s terrifying.”

Mrs Jones added: “When Ahmed’s trial was going on, I was asked if I knew if he had said he was trained to kill by Isis and I said no, we would never have taken him if we’d known. Caring for kids was my life and now this has been taken away from us.”

Jocelyn Cockburn, a specialist civil liberties solicitor from Hodge Jones & Allen, who represents Mr and Mrs Jones, said: “Surrey County Council owed Penny and Ron a duty to disclose key information about the danger Ahmed posed, and to ensure any information given was accurate, before asking them to invite him into their home.

“Instead he was presented merely as a troubled young person. This is a clear failing by the council and gives rise to claims in negligence and under the Human Rights Act 1998.

“Had the appropriate disclosure been made, Penny and Ron would not have agreed to foster Ahmed and accordingly not have suffered the distress and other difficulties they have endured.”

A Surrey County Council spokesman said: “We are defending this claim, however we acknowledge this has been a very difficult time for Mr and Mrs Jones and their family.

“We place a high value on openness with all our foster carers, share information about any risks with them from the outset and continue to keep them informed. This was our approach with Mr and Mrs Jones.”

Mr and Mrs Jones are raising money for a legal fighting fund to help pay for their legal action on www.crowdjustice.com.

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