I'm glad to see that the Brits are starting to get serious.
They're being pressured hard by, get this, the French:
A forgotten war that is bringing terror to our streets (The Times of London on Algeria, Ricin Plot)
When the French authorities cautioned that Britain was becoming a magnet for a terror diaspora, the response was more a shrug than a shudder. But the arrests in London and Manchester, and the murder of a policeman, have finally woken Britain to the Algerian terror laboratory that has been churning out militants for a decade.The contrast between the two countries is stark. In France, under direct attack, the inquisitorial judicial system went after the terrorists, but we preferred merely to monitor suspected militants. European diplomats grimly referred to Londonistan, pointing to our liberal asylum laws and tolerance of extremist propaganda in British mosques. As many as 40,000 Algerians may have arrived here over the past decade, but officials rechecking asylum applications say they have so far been able to trace only a fraction.
French fury at what they see as lunatic leniency on Britains part has focused on the case of Rashid Ramda, an Algerian granted asylum in Britain in 1992 and accused by France of masterminding the bombing campaign on the Métro. For nearly eight years the Home Office has refused to extradite Ramda; only after 9/11 did David Blunkett finally sign the extradition, which was then overturned by the High Court pending an evaluation of whether the suspects safety could be assured if he was handed over to France.
The French, signatories to the same human rights conventions as Britain, are understandably livid, seeing the Ramda case as symptomatic of a failure to appreciate and act on the Algerian threat. Frustrated by Britains policy of watchful tolerance, French secret service agents are now said to be conducting their own surveillance of the Algerian community in Britain.