A clergyman Liverpool Cathedral has raised concerns previously about asylum seekers pretending to be Christians in order to improve their chances of being granted refugee status.
Rev Mohammad Eghtedarian admitted in 2016 that ‘plenty of people’ were lying about their intentions after it emerged that the Church of England had christened hundreds of asylum seekers under a scheme dubbed ‘pray to stay’.
Emad Al Swealmeen (Poppy Day bomber) was baptized in 2015 at the cathedral. He later went on and was confirmed in 2017.
But the cathedral ‘lost contact’ with him the following year – with the bishop who carried out his confirmation service saying yesterday he had ‘no specific recollection’ of Al Swealmeen.
Liverpool Cathedral clergyman raised concerns that asylum seekers might be posing as Christians to improve their chances for being granted refugee status. Poppy Day bomber Emad Al Swealmeen (Pictured right) was baptised in 2015 at the cathedral and went on to be confirmed in 2017
His conversion to Islam is undisputed. Sources also stress that his baptism did not play a role in his multiple asylum requests.
However, a counter-extremism think-tank last night called for an investigation into the ‘Liverpool Cathedral convert cluster’.
Rev Eghtedarian said in 2016: ‘People are desperate for a better life and sometimes they will lie for it – that’s understandable.
‘There are many people abusing the system… I’m not ashamed of saying that. But is it the person’s fault or the system’s fault? Who are they tricking? The Home Office, me as a pastor, or God?’
The previous year a lay minister at the cathedral – who would later take in Al Swealmeen – also warned that some asylum seekers ‘attend church with the sole purpose of advancing their asylum claims’.
Previous statements by the Home Office have stated that conversion to Christianity is not a prerequisite for submitting an asylum application. The Church of England has said baptism is ‘open to all’.
But Sam Ashworth-Hayes, of the counter-extremist Henry Jackson Society, said: ‘We know that people are willing to lie to win asylum up to and including faking religious conversions. This is incentivised by the asylum system, which does not do enough to root out fakes.’
At the time of Al-Swealmeen’s baptism, Liverpool Cathedral was in the midst of a successful drive to both boost its congregation and embrace prospective converts.
Over 130 Iranian immigrants were converted to Christianity, while 200 refugees emigrated from Iran between 2012-2016.
Previous statements by the Home Office have stated that conversion to Christianity is not a prerequisite for submitting an asylum application. The Church of England has said baptism is ‘open to all’. Emad al Swealmeen (Pictured).
Liverpool, at the time, was a centre of dispersal for asylum seekers. There were volunteers who helped mentor and guide refugees and to help them get access to food banks and charities.
In 2016 the Very Rev Peter Wilcox, then Dean of Liverpool and now Bishop of Sheffield, admitted some had ‘mixed motives’, adding: ‘Once you are a baptised Christian it is really not conceivable that you would be deported to a Muslim country.’ At the end of that year, Church Commissioners agreed £1million of funding to roll out the Anglican cathedral’s ‘multiplying congregations’ scheme across the diocese.And Liverpool Cathedral’s weekly average aggregate attendance had also risen to 702, from 438 in 2013.
Insiders stressed that the two-year ‘examination process’ of Christian conversion was ‘rigorous’ and designed to weed out opportunists.
Those applying for asylum go on to be challenged ‘strongly’ on their faith by the Home Office to check it is genuine. Al Swealmeen was a graduate of the Liverpool Cathedral’s evangelical Alpha Christian course and is reported to have spoken passionately about Jesus Christ after his conversion.
Retired Lieutenant Colonel Malcolm Hitchcott, 77, who took in Al Swealmeen after he converted, said: ‘When he came to live with us it was a very good opportunity to give him a genuine spiritual assessment.’
Al-Swealmeen – who weeks later changed his name by deed poll to Enzo Almeni – was ‘very well-founded in the scriptures’, prayed for at least half an hour a day and attended the Sunday service each week at the cathedral, he added.
The current Dean of Liverpool Cathedral last night suggested Al Swealmeen’s faith had been genuine, saying two years was a ‘long time’ to attend church for asylum reasons alone. The Very Rev Sue Jones added: ‘We can’t have responsibility for everyone. What we offer here is a safe space for asylum seekers.’
Bishop Cyril Ashton, who conducted Al Swealmeen’s confirmation service, said: ‘The church takes confirmation seriously… It seems that, sadly, the bomber chose a different path for his life.’
Counter-terror police are considering the cathedral a possible target. Its Remembrance Day service was taking place a mile from Liverpool Women’s Hospital at 11am on Sunday.