Hakeem was found guilty after trial at Paisley Sheriff Court
|
A man who threatened to blow up a train and shouted "you Britons and Americans are killing all my people" has been sentenced to four months in jail.
Mohammed Ashraf Hakeem, 42, from Glasgow, made the threat on a train as it pulled into Paisley Gilmour Street.
He was found guilty of a racially aggravated breach of the peace.
Sentencing at Paisley Sheriff Court, Sheriff Bill Dunlop said: "You terrorised those people on that train. They were genuinely scared."
He added: "In these days of real terrorists, we cannot have people going around on public transport pretending to be terrorists."
Hakeem, an unemployed waiter, made the threat on 30 December, 2005, on a Glasgow to Gourock train.
'Pathetic drunk'
He stood in the train carriage and said: "I could bomb the lot of you in a second if I wanted to."
Witnesses told how they became so anxious that they got up and moved.
Sheriff Dunlop said: "You chose deliberately to mention Britons and Americans.
"Set against the appalling events of last year, I cannot imagine a clearer case of racial aggravation."
The court heard Hakeem had been little more than a "sad, pathetic drunk" who had been disowned by his family due to his excessive drinking.