EXCLUSIVE: Palestinian terrorist jailed for car bomb attack on Israel Embassy in London finds love with one of Britain’s top economics professors
- EXCLUSIVE: Jawad Botmeh is in a relationship with an economics academic
- Botmeh was sentenced to 20 years in jail in 1996 after he was found guilty
- Dr Elisa van Waeyenberge campaigned for his freedom and visited him in prison
A convicted Palestinian terrorist, jailed for a car bomb attack on the Israeli Embassy in London, has found love with one of Britain’s top economics professors.
Jawad Botmeh, 55, was sentenced to 20 years in jail in 1996 after he was found guilty of conspiracy to cause explosions in the UK.
He was released in 2008 and is in a relationship with an academic who campaigned for his freedom and visited him in prison, MailOnline can reveal.
Mr Botmeh now lives in a three-storey house in a leafy north London street with Dr Elisa van Waeyenberge, who is professor in development economics at the London university SOAS, the School of Oriental and African Studies.
SOAS has been one of the universities most criticised for failing to prevent hostility towards Jews.
The day after the Hamas terror attack on Israel which killed hundreds including babies, the University’s Palestinian Society posted a celebratory message with a clenched fist emoji and the text: ‘The Palestinian people have the right to resist occupation by any means necessary’.
The couple make no secret of their continued interest in the conflict over Gaza and fly a Palestinian flag from the first-floor window of their home where houses sell for more than £1.5 million.
Jawad Botmeh (pictured yesterday), now 55, was released in 2008 and is in a relationship with an academic
Dr Elisa van Waeyenberge (pictured yesterday) campaigned for his freedom and visited him in prison, MailOnline can reveal
The flag has been painted onto cardboard with the message ‘We ❤️ Palestine’ and placed for all to see behind a windowsill flower ornament.
Mr Botmeh waved his partner off as she cycled away from their home and told MailOnline he had put his violent past behind him.
‘I have been living quietly for many years and I have got a family’, he said.
‘I am not a public figure. I have got nothing to say, not to you, not to anyone. I haven’t said anything to anybody and really I am not interested.’
But he said of the situation in Gaza: ‘It is a sad thing that we are all seeing.’
Mr Botmeh was involved in a bombing campaign against Jewish targets in London with banker’s daughter Samar Alami who was aged 30.
Businessman Mr Botmeh, who was 28 at the time of the bombings and his accomplice came from well-to-do families and went to English universities.
Unknown to their families, they were part of an extremist terrorist cell which hoped to sabotage the Middle East peace process in 1994 with two massive car bombs which rocked the Israeli Embassy and the offices of a Jewish charity.
The Old Bailey judge Mr Justice Garland recommended that both should be deported at the end of their sentences and said the car bombs caused several millions of pounds of damage and could have caused death or serious injury. No one was killed, although 19 people were hurt.
Alami and Botmeh had scientific degrees which had given them the knowledge they needed to make high explosives, the jury was told.
The court heard that the two were among terrorists who believed that Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat `was misguided’ in his attempts to come to any accommodation with Israel.
The Israeli Embassy, in Kensington Palace Gardens, and Balfour House, a North London office block, were blasted after the then Israeli leader Yitzhak Rabin and King Hussein of Jordan signed a declaration which `paved the way for peace between their two countries’.
Jawad Botmeh, 55, was sentenced to 20 years in jail in 1996 after he was found guilty of conspiracy to cause explosions in the UK. Pictured: Mr Botmeh in 1996
Businessman Mr Botmeh, who was 28 at the time of the bombings and his accomplice came from well-to-do families and went to English universities. Pictured: Mr Botmeh in 1996
But Mr Botmeh’s defence team argued that the bombs were intended to be only ‘symbolic against symbolic targets’ and were timed to go off when they would cause limited injuries.
The judge, however, gave each of the terrorists a 20-year sentence.
It was while he was jailed that Dr van Waeyenberge struck up a friendship which developed into a relationship when he was released.
She shared a flat with Mr Jawed’s sister Samia and accompanied her flat mate to visit her brother in jail.
Dr van Waeyenberge told a local newspaper: ‘We started calling on a regular basis. That is the context in which it developed. It was a friendship and then the feelings on both sides changed.’
She was convinced of his innocence as he had claimed during his trial.
She added: ‘If you look at it a bit more closely, there is no doubt about his innocence.’
She described his conviction as ‘a classic case of being set up. They were experimenting with explosives but that was just silly. It was misjudged.’
While in prison, he taught himself to paint and create art ceramics and his artworks were displayed in a London gallery while he was still in prison.
One piece was labelled ‘Love Behind Bars’ and he wrote a speech for Dr van Waeyenberge to read out which said: ‘Inspiration came when I fell in love with a special person.’
While in prison he studied for a Master’s degree in Peace and Reconciliation studies in 2006.
His thesis, available online, ended with him thanking her.
He wrote: ‘I am indebted to many people, more so than usual because this study was conducted behind bars, and I depended entirely upon their support to complete this dissertation.
‘I single out for special acknowledgment my partner Elisa Van Waeyenberge and thank her for her love, encouragement, guidance and for inspiring me to do this study, and for helping me with her formidable research skills and intellect to research, resource, disentangle, discuss, and finally edit this topic . . . without Elisa I could not have done this dissertation therefore, I am deeply grateful.’
MailOnline has contacted Dr van Waeyenberge for comment.
Source: Read Full Article