chanting when libyans took to the streets of manchester to celebrate the fall of colonel gaddafi ali's daughter was a toddler know she is a young mancunian. my daughter said, i'm a mancunian. my daughter said, i'm a mancunian. i said, ok, mancunian. my daughter said, i'm a mancunian. isaid, ok, you are. salman abedi do not fit in. this seems to be an emerging subculture among young individuals mainly from second—generation, not the first or the third, second generation who don't feel they belong here, they feel there is no future for them. current strategy is not working so what is to be done? it's important not to see this as the problem of one community or one faith or one religion. this is a british problem. these individuals are born here. they are being raised here. here in cheetham hill we are less than two miles north of the arena. the libyans we have spoken to living here don't want to come on, and you can see why. there is one thing that keeps coming up, stopping radicalisation doesn't depend on imams and teachers, it depends on opportunities for young people. as one libyan da