UK government funds jihadist organizations

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UK government faces accusations of spending tax-payer’s money towards funding jihadist groups and Taliban supporters.

The jihadist who murdered Tory MP Sir David Amess was also referred to the Prevent program. Via Prevent, British taxpayers have been unwittingly pouring their hard-earned cash into jihadist groups. These jihadists, who are at war with Britain, have been enjoying easy cash and a good laugh at Western gullibility. Four months ago, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak stated that “people with ‘extreme hatred of Britain’” could be deradicalized by Prevent’s deradicalization scheme, and he promised to “widen the definition of extremism to include people who vilify the country.” In other words, he promised to pour more money into the failed and dangerous Prevent program, despite warnings about it.

A pattern has long emerged with the British Conservative party in dealing with the illegals (mostly Muslims from Africa and the Middle East) who have been flooding into the country via the English Channel, which provides a perfect opportunity for jihadist infiltration. For years, the government has repeatedly made empty promises to the British people and keep throwing hard-earned taxpayer money at the problem. The approach is intended to shut people up, give them a sense of false security, and make it look as though the government is actually making an effort to solve the problem.

The British government has long been betraying British citizens, just as the governments of so many Western countries are betraying their people. How long with populations put up with globalists before they realize the globalists’ ruinous intentions?

According to a report published in the Express, British taxpayers’ money went towards groups that promoted Islamist extremism and Taliban supporters, according to a landmark review. The finding that government-funded groups effectively promoted extremism is expected to provoke a backlash about the country’s counter-terrorism strategy. The shocking findings emerged during a review by Sir William Shawcross, a former head of the Charity Commission, into the Government’s anti-terror scheme Prevent.

A leaked draft of the report, seen by The Telegraph, uncovered how the Government’s own de-radicalization strategy went badly wrong.

Groups funded by Prevent were led by people who allegedly supported the Taliban, defended banned militant Islamist groups and hosted hate preachers.

The report draft alleges that the Government funded groups that “had promoted extremist narrative”.

Prevent was set up in immediate response to 9/11 and was developed over a number of years.

The scheme was tasked with stopping people from becoming terrorists or terrorist sympathizers.

A number of groups and charities were awarded taxpayers’ money to help steer young Muslims in particular away from terrorism.

However, the Shawcross report found that a number of the organizations went on to promote extreme Islamist ideas.

Sir William was appointed to review the scheme in January 2021 by then-Home Secretary Priti Patel.

His independent review was delivered to the Home Office in late April but has been repeatedly delayed amid ongoing fact and legal checks.

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