by antiaristo » Tue Jul 19, 2005 10:43 am
                                                C/Eusebio Navarro,12<br>Mr Justice Keith                                        35003 Las Palmas de Gran<br>Zahid Mubarek Inquiry Chairman                Spain                        Canaria<br>                                                21 November 2004 <br><br>Your Honour,<br><br>“The same is true for the prisons. You can see from my application how the Windsors tried to do murder to me in January 1995 and then again in April 2000. How could they hope to get away with it? Easily. Over the past thirty years more than a thousand human beings have been murdered whilst incarcerated in a British prison. Overwhelmingly they were male, working class and ethnic minority. So I fit the profile quite well.<br><br>Now this is very useful if you have a problem and make a habit of telling your servants to “make it go away!” So can we really feign surprise that our Most Gracious Lady the Queen should use her dictatorial powers to suppress all information about individual homicides? So no apologies, and never an inquiry in all these thirty years.<br><br>Until the fight put up by the family and friends of Zahid Mubarek, a nineteen year old first offender who was murdered on 21 March 2000. Lord Woolf and two others had ruled that under English law no inquiry was mandated. Yet on 16 October FIVE Law Lords were hurriedly convened to overrule Woolf and effect an historic volte-face. Again, this is wholly unprecedented.”<br>John Cleary to F Elens-Passos, European Court of Human Rights, 3 December 2004 <br><br>Yours sincerely,<br><br><br><br><br>John Cleary BSc MA MBA<br><br>Enc.        F Elens-Passos (European Court of Human Rights) to Cleary 25.11.2003<br>Cleary to Elens-Passos 3.12.2003<br><br>Cellmate killer belonged to deadly gang, inquiry told <br><br>David Batty<br>Saturday November 20, 2004<br>The Guardian<br><br>A racist prisoner who killed his Asian cellmate was part of a gang who murdered fellow inmates, a public inquiry was told yesterday. <br>Zahid Mubarek was killed by Robert Stewart at Feltham young offender institution, west London, in March 2000. <br><br>A statement from the Mubarek family, read out by their counsel, Patrick O'Connor QC, said Stewart deliberately chose to carry out the attack hours before Mr Mubarek was due to be released. "This was no accident," Mr O'Connor said. "The evidence will disclose that Robert Stewart was one of a group of murderous associates in other prisons. <br>"Stewart's best friend in prison ... murdered another inmate on the day of the victim's 17th birthday. Another of Stewart's good friends killed his victim on the day of his grandmother's funeral. <br>"'We are all evil,' Stewart gloated in a later letter to an associate. It is difficult to disagree," he added. <br><br>Stewart had planned the killing of Mr Mubarek, 19, obtaining a wooden dagger and loosening a table leg which he later used to bludgeon his victim while he slept, Mr O'Connor went on. <br>Stewart also wrote in a letter the month before the killing of his intention to take extreme measures to get moved from Feltham, including threats to "kill me fucking padmate" while dressed as a member of the Ku Klux Klan. The letter also made reference to Adolf Hitler and the murdered black teenager Stephen Lawrence. <br>Three months after the murder, in June 2000, Stewart, then 24, wrote to his brother inciting harassment of the Mubarek family and giving their home address. <br>He wrote: "Ya, do you want to get up to any of your phone antics? Do some dodgy orders? I'm not 100% sure but [address] Walthamstow, East London. It's an old friend of ours. Do a 192 check first." <br><br>In another letter he expressed eagerness to receive morgue photographs of Mr Mubarek's body and promised to pass them on to a friend. <br>The inquiry is expected to conclude in March. <br>Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004<br>Prison killer 'sent boasting letters to racist gangmates'<br>By Cahal Milmo<br>20 November 2004 The Independent<br>A racist prisoner who battered his Asian cellmate to death was part of a circle of murderous inmates scattered across British jails who plotted violent hate crimes, an inquiry was told yesterday.<br>Robert Stewart, who is serving a life sentence for the murder of Zahid Mubarek four years ago, wrote to friends gloating over killings they had committed and predicting he would kill his "padmate" while dressed as a member of the Ku Klux Klan and carrying a flaming crucifix.<br>Giving evidence at the second day of the judicial inquiry into the death of Mr Mubarek, his family's lawyer said the "sickening timing" of Stewart's attack, just hours before Zahid was due to be released, had been deliberate. Patrick O'Connor QC said: "This was no accident. The evidence will disclose that Robert Stewart was one of a group of murderous associates in other prisons."<br>The inquiry, chaired by Mr Justice Keith, was told that Stewart had been copying his fellow gang members by choosing significant dates to carry out their killings. His best friend while in prison had murdered another inmate on day of his victim's 17th birthday, while another associate, also serving a prison sentence, had killed his victim on the day of his grandmother's funeral, Mr O'Connor said. In a letter to one member of the gang, Stewart proclaimed: "We are all evil."<br>Underlining the premeditated nature of Stewart's racism, the inquiry in central London heard that, after the murder of Mr Mubarek at the Feltham young offenders' institution in west London, the killer wrote to his brother inciting him to harass his victim's family and supplying their address. Stewart wrote: "Do you want to get up to some of your phone antics? Do some dodgy orders? ... It's an old friend of ours."<br>In other letters, displaying what Mr O'Connor described as "utter, callous indifference", Stewart, now 24, gave graphic descriptions of how he bludgeoned his 19-year-old cellmate with a table leg while he slept. The killer, who had been diagnosed as a psychopath, also promised to send a friend copies of autopsy photographs of Mr Mubarek.<br>The inquiry heard that Mr Mubarek, from Walthamstow, east London, who was serving three months for theft, had written to his family expressing remorse while in custody. The teenager, described as a model prisoner, said: "Dad, I knew I should have listened to you ... Tell my mum I love her so much and not to worry."<br>The Prison Service has apologised to the Mubarek family.<br>Mr O'Connor asked the inquiry chairman not to be swayed by claims from the Home Office that the mistakes which led to the killing could not be repeated. The barrister, who has said the Prison Service missed 14 opportunities to save Mr Mubarek from his killer, said: "You will be suffocated with assurances that all but a few problems are history. The buzz words will buzz, the cliches will flow. Penetrating jargon will only be a first step." <br><br>{According to the British press, the people of Spain are racists because they boo foul play in football. What of the Prince of Wales, whose Masons organize the slaughter of ethnic minorities in their vicious games of Gladiator?????}<br><br> <p></p><i></i>