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IF EVER there were model immigrants, they were the Tanweers. The close-knit family, originally from Pakistan, had made a good life in Britain, running their fish and chip shop and living in a large detached house in the Beeston area of Leeds, with two Mercedes cars parked outside.
They were good Muslims, respected in a local multi-ethnic community of whites,
Africans, East Europeans, Pakistanis and Bengalis. But then Shehzad, one of
their four children, went missing last week from the family home in Colwyn
Road. Police believe that he was not only a victim of last Thursday’s London
bombings, but one of the perpetrators.
Across the city in Holbeck, Mahmood and Maniza Hussain, also originally from
Pakistan, heard only the same deathly silence from their son Hasib, 19.
They, too, face the likelihood that another loving family has spawned a
suicide bomber.
The two sons were friends who had sprung from similar backgrounds. Yet they
were different characters, one intelligent, studious and a keen cricketer,
the other a wild teenager who suddenly turned to an intense religious faith.
Shehzad had a brother and two sisters, children of the proprietor of South
Leeds Fisheries, a familiar and respected figure in the Beeston community.
The fish shop was open yesterday but there was no sign of the owner.
Mohamed Ansaar Riaz, 19, and Azzy Mohamed, 21, said their friend Shehzad was
“the best lad you could ever meet”. They described how he had grown up in
Beeston, studied sports science subjects at university and been a competent
all-rounder for a local Asian cricket team. He last played only a fortnight
ago. “He was a sweet guy who gets on with everyone,” Mr Riaz said.
Shehzad’s uncle, Mohamed Azfal, said that his nephew visited Pakistan last
year. The family had come originally from Faisalabad. “His dad said he keeps
telephoning him but there is never any reply, so he is worrying himself to
death.”
It was a phone call from the equally anxious parents of Hasib Hussain to the
police to report him missing from their home in a sloping red-brick row of
terraced houses that alerted officers to a possible connection with the
outrage.
A cousin said yesterday that Hasib “went off the rails and his parents were
very worried. They wanted to instil some discipline in him; I don’t know
what happened, but 18 months to two years ago Hasib suddenly changed and
became devoutly religious.”
The cousin, who asked not to be named, said that Hasib’s family knew that he
had travelled south in the days leading up to the bombings, and grew
extremely concerned when they were unable to make contact with him. “In the
end his family telephoned the police and reported him missing,” the cousin
said.
A friend of Shehzad and Hasib said that both were highly respected and looked
up to by younger members of the community. “Shehzad was the sort of person
who would always tell the young kids that they should stay out of trouble
and make something of their life. Hasib was also someone I looked up to,
even though he was a year younger than me. He was a real gentle giant. He
went on the Haj (pilgrimage to Mecca) a couple of years ago and grew a beard
for that, but he never came across as any sort of a fanatic.”
The friend, who asked not to be named, said that he was “devastated” to learn
that the pair may have been involved in the London bombings.
“After 9/11, I can remember talking to Shehzad. He said that what had happened
was wrong, that there was a place in heaven for everyone who believed in one
God.”
Two other Leeds men have been missing and out of contact with their families
since the London bomb attack, but their identities are less clear.
Yesterday’s raids involved five addresses in Leeds and Dewsbury. Police
sealed properties in Colwyn Road and Stratford Street in the Beeston area.
At the same time in Dewsbury, they swooped on a redbrick council semi in
Lees Holme and a modern bungalow in Thornhill Park.
Farida Patel, an Asian woman, is believed to live at the bungalow with her
daughter, Hasina, and son, Arshad. Later yesterday police took away a Honda
and a silver Ford Escort from the house.
In Hyde Park Road, near the city centre, armed police raided a property
identified by Scotland Yard as a bomb factory.
At about 1pm more than 500 residents and workers were evacuated from the
Woodsley Road area as police began a forensic examination of Alexandra
Grove, a block of modern purpose-built student flats, after gaining entry by
a controlled explosion.
Last night, police erected scaffolding, draped in tarpaulin, outside several
of the addresses, including Stratford Street and Colwyn Road, to mask the
activities of forensic officers.
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