June 06, 2017
A third man arrested for carrying out Saturday´s deadly attack in London is an Italian-Moroccan who was arrested last year on suspicion of trying to reach Syria, Italian sources said Tuesday.
The mayor of Valsamoggia, a town near Bologna, said that Youssef Zaghba, 22, was the son of an Italian mother and a Moroccan father who had separated, and was registered as an Italian living overseas.
"In fact he never lived here," said the mayor, Daniele Ruscigno. "The only member of the family that lived here was the mother, who was known but has not been seen around for some time," he told reporters.
Zaghba had lived mainly in Morocco but had recently spent time working in Britain, most recently at a London restaurant, according to Italian media reports.
The AGI news agency said Zaghba was intercepted at Bologna airport last year as he was about to board a plane for Turkey.
Italy´s anti-terrorist force DIGOS believed he was trying to join Daesh militants in Syria.
He was detained carrying only a small backpack, his passport and a one-way ticket to Istanbul.
Police reportedly found Daesh propoganda videos on his cellphone, but after an investigation, they failed to find sufficient evidence of links to terrorism to justify prosecuting him.
As a holder of an Italian passport he was not liable for expulsion under the kind of administrative order Italy routinely uses against suspected religious militants from Morocco and Tunisia, and so he was released.
According to AGI, the British and Moroccan authorities were notified of Zaghba´s status as a potential militant by DIGOS.
But British police have said Zaghba was "not a police or MI5 subject of interest".
According to the reports, Zaghba was born in Fez, Morocco, in January 1995. His mother was said to have told police last year that he had asked her for money to travel to Rome before he left on his attempted trip to Syria.
The Met's Counter Terrorism Command earlier today released the name and photograph Zaghba.
All three men involved in the attack were confronted and shot dead by armed officers within eight minutes of the first call.
The other two were named on June 5 as Pakistani-born British citizen Khuram Shazad Butt, 27, and Rachid Redouane, 30, from Barking, had claimed to be Moroccan and Libyan. He also used the name Rachid Elkhdar, with a different date of birth of 31.7.91.
Italy´s main newspapers said Zaghba´s mother was from Bologna and his father was Moroccan.