Jeremiah Adebolajo, 26, is a university English teacher in Saudi
Arabia Allegedly approached by MI6 who pressured him to become a spy
.Flown business class to five-star hotels and handed cash Sister
Blessing says he 'strongly' rejected offers to work for
MI6 .Asked to help 'turn' his brother Michael because of links to terror groups
MI6 .Asked to help 'turn' his brother Michael because of links to terror groups
The younger brother of one of the men accused of murdering Drummer Lee
Rigby was paid thousands of pounds by MI6 as part of spying operations
in the Middle East, The Mail on Sunday has discovered.
Jeremiah Adebolajo, who uses the name Abul Jaleel, was also asked to
help ‘turn’ his brother, Michael, to work for MI5, who were already
aware of Michael’s close links to extremist groups.
The claims are made by the Adebolajo family and a well-placed source who
contacted The Mail on Sunday.Jeremiah Adebolajo, 26, who works as an
English teacher at a university in Saudi Arabia and returned to Britain
this week, is to be questioned about his brother by Scotland Yard
counter-terrorism detectives today.
Government sources have already confirmed that Michael Adebolajo was
known to MI5. Last week it was alleged that he rebuffed efforts by the
security service to recruit him as a spy.
Michael, 28, was discharged from hospital on Friday and was yesterday
charged with the murder of Drummer Rigby and attempted murder of two
police officers on May 22 in Woolwich, South London.
Now it has emerged that MI5’s sister agency, MI6, had targeted Jeremiah, a married teacher based at the University of Ha’il.
MI5 and MI6 work closely together on counter-terrorism operations. MI5
focuses on home security, while MI6 targets threats from overseas.A
document seen by The Mail on Sunday details concerns raised by
Jeremiah’s family about MI6’s alleged harassment in April last year.
In it, Jeremiah’s sister, Blessing Adebolajo, 32, who works as a human
resources assistant in London, says her brother was approached by MI6
while he was working at the University of Ha’il – an important strategic
location in the Middle East because it takes only one hour by plane to
reach 11 Arab capitals.
Dailymail
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