Squalid lair of the Poppy Day suicide bomber in Liverpool

This is the cramped, shabby Liverpool home of suicide bomber Enzo Almeni, from where he plotted to carry out his failed Poppy Day attack and made pizzas in his spare time.

Almeni, 32, who was born Emad Jamil Al-Swealmeen, is believed to have been living in the terraced property in the Kensington area of the city, which he shared with three other asylum seekers, for more than a year.

It had been converted from three bedrooms to four and was managed by Serco, which provides housing for asylum seekers and is valued at around £70,000. Asylum seekers have been housed there for the past ten years.

One former resident told MailOnline that he often complained to Serco officials about conditions inside the home and pleaded with them to move him, which they eventually did in early 2020.

TJ Jayaweera, 29 an asylum seeker from Sri Lanka revealed that the bedroom walls were made of thin plywood and it was difficult to sleep at night because of continual noise. 

Mr Jayaweera, who lived in the property for almost three years moaned: ‘It was filthy and very noise and horrible to live in. There were a lot of asylum seekers like me coming and going but I was there for the longest period of time.

‘The place was filthy and not very well maintained. It was a struggle to live there but I didn’t have any other choice. It’s been used to house asylum seekers for almost ten years.’

These are the first pictures inside the cramped, shabby Liverpool home of bomber Enzo Almeni, from where he plotted to carry out his failed bombing of the city’s Women’s Hospital shortly before 11am on Remembrance Sunday

An ex-resident, who lived at the four bedroom property worth around £70,000, gave MailOnline exclusive photos from inside. They show suitcases on the floor in the lounge and said the bedroom walls were made of thin plywood, making sleep difficult

An ex-resident, who lived at the four bedroom property worth around £70,000, gave MailOnline exclusive photos from inside. They show suitcases on the floor in the lounge and said the bedroom walls were made of thin plywood, making sleep difficult 

Almeni, 32, who was born Emad Jamil Al-Swealmeen, is seen with a pizza that he had made during his time a catering college

Almeni, 32, who was born Emad Jamil Al-Swealmeen, is seen with a pizza that he had made during his time a catering college

He added that he never met the landlord of the property but was in regular contact with his Serco housing manager. 

Mr Jayaweera said: ‘I would send emails to the manager complaining about the living conditions in the home. There are a lot of properties housing asylum seekers in that part of Liverpool and the conditions are very poor.’

Born in Iraq and brought up in Syria, Almeni came to Britain seven years ago. He had a history of mental health problems, and was once sectioned for brandishing a knife near Liverpool’s city centre, friends said.

Almeni (pictured) was born in Iraq and raised in Syria before travelling to the UK seven years ago and settled in Liverpool

Almeni (pictured) was born in Iraq and raised in Syria before travelling to the UK seven years ago and settled in Liverpool

He relinquished his Muslim faith and converted to Christianity soon after arriving in the UK, having attended Bible classes and services at Liverpool’s imposing Anglican Cathedral. 

The site was originally thought to have been the target of his failed Remembrance Day plot. In May 2017 Al Swealmeen changed his by deed poll to make it easier to pronounce.  

In tribute to Ferrari founder Enzo Ferrari, the car-mad asylum seeker became Enzo Almeni. Pictures online show trips to a go-kart track – and a chequered flag tattooed on his arm. 

The son of an Iraqi mother and Syrian father, he arrived in the UK in early 2014. His first application to the Home Office for asylum was turned down that November. 

He was arrested soon afterwards, lay pastor and friend Malcolm Hitchcott said, for possession of a ‘large knife’.

Al Swealmeen had regularly attended ‘instruction’ workshops and Bible study courses led by Mr Hitchcott at the cathedral. 

It was there that he was confirmed into Christianity in a ceremony attended by Mr Hitchcott and his wife, Elizabeth, on March 27, 2017. Days later the devout couple, both 77, offered to put up the then-destitute Al Swealmeen in their home rent-free as he had nowhere else to live.

Last night a shocked Mr Hitchcott said he felt ‘numbed’ that the ‘lovely man’ who stayed with him in the suburb of Aigburth was behind Sunday’s explosion. 

‘My wife and I will now have to try to come to terms with this, the fact we had this man living with us for eight months,’ the former soldier said. 

The men would go for walks, where the typically quiet Al Swealmeen would ‘talk endlessly and passionately about Jesus’. Asked why he thought Al Swealmeen converted to Christianity, Mr Hitchcott said: ‘A lot of asylum seekers do not see much in Islam [for them].’

 

Almeni is believed to have been living in the terraced property in the Kensington area of the city for more than a year

Almeni is believed to have been living in the terraced property in the Kensington area of the city for more than a year

The suicide bomber shared the property run by Serco in the Kensington area of Liverpool with three other asylum seekers

The suicide bomber shared the property run by Serco in the Kensington area of Liverpool with three other asylum seekers

One former resident told MailOnline that he often complained to Serco officials about the filthy conditions inside the home

One former resident told MailOnline that he often complained to Serco officials about the filthy conditions inside the home

He said he and his wife got to know Al Swealmeen ‘very well… or we thought we did’. 

Their guest left on good terms after eight months. The Hitchcotts, who were going on holiday, worried about him being alone in their home. ‘We told him he could stay and our daughter would pop in, but he decided to leave,’ Mrs Hitchcott said.

In May 2017 Al Swealmeen changed his name by deed poll to make it easier to pronounce. In tribute to Ferrari founder Enzo Ferrari, the car-mad asylum seeker became Enzo Almeni

In May 2017 Al Swealmeen changed his name by deed poll to make it easier to pronounce. In tribute to Ferrari founder Enzo Ferrari, the car-mad asylum seeker became Enzo Almeni

The 32-year-old was a regular at the go-kart track, according to social media photos

The 32-year-old was a regular at the go-kart track, according to social media photos

The couple cannot recall Al Swealmeen ever speaking of anything ‘political’, and remember only one ‘flashpoint’.

Mr Hitchcott said: ‘He was involved in an incident prior to our meeting where he was found by police with a pretty big knife on the main Churchill Way flyover.

‘I don’t know if he threatened anyone but as a result of that he was sectioned for several months.

‘He obviously had some mental instability because one day he accused me of opening his mail. He came in and said, ‘Is there something you want to know about me’, and accused me. I told him we wouldn’t dream of it. He did come and apologise afterwards.

‘He had received a small package, he told me it was something for a friend of his… makes me wonder about it now. He obviously didn’t want me poking my nose in and got very sensitive. Otherwise we were on the best of terms with him. If we wanted a job doing he would do it, no problem.’

Mrs Hitchcott said Al Swealmeen would go to the food bank with them and do chores around the house. ‘He was fairly private but very industrious,’ she added. ‘He loved to draw, he was very interested in art and could cook a mean pizza.’

Photos on Mr Hitchcott’s web profiles show Al Swealmeen in chef’s whites bought for him by his hosts. While Mr Hitchcott hadn’t seen Al Swealmeen for several years, his wife bumped into him two years ago in the town centre.

‘It must have been around spring 2019 because it was before Covid,’ she said. ‘He told me he was doing a cake decorating course, he was really enthusiastic about it. He said he would keep in touch but I didn’t hear any more.’ 

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