Judge slams 'devious' Parsons Green bomber who lied about his age before trying to blow up 93 commuters on a rush hour Tube train as he jails him for at least 34 years
- Judge says Ahmed Hassan led double life, playing victim while plotting carnage
- The judge was satisfied that Hassan had lied about his age to stay in the UK
- He says asylum seeker's fearsome bomb could have caused 'numerous fatalities'
- Hassan was jailed for life and will serve a minimum of 34 years behind bars

Ahmed Hassan claims to be 18 but a judge says he is satisfied he lied about his age in order to remain in the UK
A judge described the Parsons Green bomber as 'devious' and believed he lied about his age in order to remain in the UK.
Ahmed Hassan claimed he was a 16-year-old orphan when he entered the UK three years ago and applied for asylum.
He claimed he had been kidnapped by Islamic State.
Hassan tried to blow up a packed tube train in west London and has been jailed for life with a minimum of 34 years.
He says he is 18 and pretended to engage with the anti-terrorism Prevent scheme as he plotted mass murder in the capital.
He made a bomb with 400g of 'Mother of Satan' explosives and 2.2kg of shrapnel while his unsuspecting foster parents were on holiday in Blackpool.
The Old Bailey heard he wanted to avenge the death of his father in Iraq and was 'disappointed' when the bomb only partly detonated in a huge fireball.
A jury rejected his explanation that he only wanted to act out a fantasy like the Tom Cruise film Mission: Impossible and convicted him of multiple attempted murder.
He made no reaction as Mr Justice Haddon-Cave handed him a life sentence with a minimum term of 34 years.
The judge said Hassan was a 'dangerous and devious individual' who quietly went about plotting his attack with 'ruthless determination and almost military efficiency while pretending to be a model asylum seeker'.
He told Hassan: 'Your intention that morning was to kill as many members of the British public as possible. I'm satisfied you were determined to create as much death and carnage that day as possible.'
The judge said he was satisfied Hassan had lied about his age to get special privileges.

He packed a paint tub with explosives and nails after viewing bomb recipes on YouTube
Hassan was motivated by Islamic State extremism, 'deep-seated hatred' of Britain, revenge for the death of his father and anger at continued bombing in Iraq.
For nearly two years, the highly intelligent college student had lived a 'double life', he said.
Hassan had been shown 'every kindness' since he arrived in Britain yet harboured 'dark thoughts' and significant hatred and animosity towards the country that took him in.

Hassan had been looked after by foster parents Penny and Ron Jones in Sunbury on Thames
The judge said: 'One can only imagine the sense of betrayal felt by all those at Barnardo's and Brooklands College whom you duped.'
He was satisfied Hassan had trained with ISIS in Iraq, as he told British immigration officials, and was older than he purported to be.
The asylum seeker plotted his attack under the nose of the Government's counter-extremism programme Prevent, which appears to have failed to act for months despite repeated referrals from worried charity workers and teachers.
Months before the bombing, there were warning signs that the student, who hero-worshipped ISIS, was bent on revenge on the country which had offered him shelter. Yet he managed to slip the net.
Prosecutors said it was just a 'matter of luck' his homemade device - packed with knives, screwdrivers and nails - did not fully explode.
His intended target was Earl's Court Station, where he hoped to kill hundreds of people on the train and platform in the middle of morning rush hour.

The explosive was filled with nails, screws and knives in a bid to kill as many as possible

The train which Hassan tried to blow up was left on the tracks at the west London station
But the train was delayed and the bomb went off at Parsons Green Station instead, two minutes after Hassan dumped the device and fled.
A giant fireball injured more than 30 passengers, and dozens more were wounded in the ensuing crush as they stampeded away from the explosion.
After he was found guilty, it emerged that 20 months before the attack, Prevent were tipped off about Hassan by children's charity Barnardo's a day after his first interview with the Home Office, when he revealed he had been trained to kill by ISIS in Iraq.
His teacher at college, where he was considered a model student, made a second referral in August 2016 after he was seen making a donation to ISIS and revelling in propaganda videos and 'call to arms' songs.
Prevent were called again when Hassan disappeared a month later to Wales for a week without telling anyone.
But the Iraqi asylum seeker was never considered for 'intervention' work with an Islamic expert despite the repeated warnings.
The teenage bomber did receive educational and mental health support and worryingly he also had contact with counter terrorism officers.
But no one realised he was plotting an attack that could have killed hundreds of people.
Hassan had been given an education in the UK and housed with foster parents Ron and Penny Jones.
Mrs Jones said: 'I don't think social services even realised because they never told us. If they had been aware they would have said something to us.
'The Home Office should have been honest. He still needed somewhere to live, he still needed to be looked after, but I would have liked to have known because we could've been looking out for signs of radicalisation.

Hassan was seen crisscrossing the South East as he tried to get away after the bombing. He was spotted at the Port of Dover waiting for a ferry and arrested
'It feels like a total betrayal. I can't believe he would do something like that. I'm just so grateful he didn't succeed.'

Hassan had written 'bored, bored, bored' on the door of his foster home bedroom before plotting and carrying out the attack
Her husband added: 'If we'd known, we could have been more watchful. I still can't believe he did it. He seemed like such a good kid.'
Mrs Jones added: 'The police said if the bomb had gone off when it should, it would have been in a tunnel and it would've taken out two carriages. And we would've had to live with that.
'We would have had to live, knowing it had been done in our house without our knowledge, and that people had died as a result.
'It's bad enough that people got burnt, and I feel terribly sorry for those people. I want them all to know that I knew nothing about it, and I'm horrified.
'They've obviously gone through an awful lot of trauma because of this. And so have we.'
The fact that no de-radicalisation intervention was ordered in the case will raise serious concerns about the effectiveness of Prevent.
The Home Secretary Amber Rudd will now face questions on the astonishing blunder when she appears in front of the Home Affairs Select Committee next week.
Most watchedNews videos
- Trump and Melania land in Italy for Pope's funeral
- Teenage boy stabbed after fight at Potomac High School
- Trump and Prince William attend Pope's funeral
- Pope Francis buried in simple tomb in St Mary Major basilica
- Biden seen assisted down set of stairs into funeral of Pope Francis
- Moment married headteacher attacks his deputy with wrench
- World leaders their pay respects ahead of Pope Francis' funeral
- Epstein's victim Virginia Giuffre dies by suicide
- Trump and Biden sit just five rows between them at Pope's funeral
- President Macron blows off Trump's handshake at pope's funeral
- Welcome to Country booed during ANZAC Day Dawn service in Melbourne
- Gregg Wallace opens up about his suicidal thoughts