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Djamel Beghal Djamel Beghal al-Qaeda Europe Algerian Arrested Controller 20030122  
    alleged leader of a terrorist cell, confessed to planning to blow up the US Embassy in Paris

Europe
French trial for support team of Charlie Hebdo, Hyper Cacher terror attacks finally scheduled
2019-06-08
[IsraelTimes] 14 people are accused of providing the three Jihadist button men, who were killed by Gay Paree police, logistical support and weapons; trial to begin next year.

Suspects linked to the deadly jihadist attacks that struck the Gay Paree region in January 2015, killing 17 people over a three-day period, will stand trial from April to July next year, a legal source said on Friday.

A special Gay Paree criminal court will hear the case against 14 people accused of helping the attackers, providing them with logistical support and the weapons to carry out the attacks.

The victims included 12 people killed at the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo
...A lefty French satirical magazine, home of what may well be the majority if the active testicles left in Europe...
by Cherif Kouachi and his brother Said
...Algerian-French known wolves who’d been members of the Buttes-Chaumont network that sent jihadis to Al Qaeda in Iraq following the 2003 invasion...
on January 7, 2015. They targeted the paper for its caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.

Over the following two days the third gunman, Amedy Coulibaly,
..the Mali-Frenchman whose wife Hayat Boumeddiene decamped for ISIS in Syria just before that particular excitement. She reportedly died of an airstrike during the Battle of Baghuz Fawqani...
killed a policewoman in the Montrouge suburb south of Gay Paree where authorities think he may have initially been targeting a nearby Jewish school.

He then killed four people at Hyper Cacher, a kosher supermarket during a hostage standoff with police.

All three button men were killed by police.
Of passing interest: their mentor, French-Algerian radical preacher Djamel Beghal, one of Al Qaeda’s key men in the web connecting jihadis in England and France to the home office and to the Algerian Salafist Group for Prayer and Combat (GSPC), was stripped of French citizenship and expelled to Algeria last year.
The three attackers had claimed allegiance to jihadist groups.
...that is, Al Qaeda and ISIS, but the attack was credited to Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which apparently funded the operation.
The source told AFP the trial would run from April 20 to July 3, 2020.
Pencilled in on my calendar.
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Europe
France Expels 'Mentor' of 2015 Jihadist Attackers to Algeria
2018-07-17
[AnNahar] La Belle France on Monday expelled a radical Islamic preacher to Algeria after his release from prison, where he became a mentor to at least two jihadis who carried out deadly attacks on a satirical newspaper and a Jewish supermarket in January 2015, officials said.

Djamel Beghal was given a 10-year jail term in 2005 after being sent to La Belle France following his arrest in the United Arab Emirates shortly after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks in the US.

He was suspected of leading a network charged by the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now beyond all cares and woe...
to attack American interests in La Belle France and is considered by French officials to have been a mentor for several generations of aspiring jihadists.

His activities have also highlighted the struggle by French authorities to prevent Islamic radicalisation in prisons, which have proved fertile recruiting grounds for jihadist fighters.

Beghal, now 52 and stripped of his French nationality, was freed from the Vezin-le-Coquet prison near the western city of Rennes early Monday.

He was brought to Charles de Gaulle airport near Gay Paree for a flight to Algiers, a source close to the case told AFP.

Beghal had been under surveillance for suspected radicalism by French intelligence agents since the mid-1990s, following his arrival in the country from his native Algeria when he was 21 years old.

While serving his first prison sentence Beghal met Cherif Kouachi, one of the brothers who massacred 12 people in an attack on the Charlie Hebdo
...A lefty French satirical magazine, home of what may well be the majority if the active testicles left in Europe...
magazine in January 2015.

Amedy Coulibaly, the man who killed a policewoman and then four shoppers at a Jewish supermarket just outside Gay Paree that same month, also came under Beghal's influence at the Fleury-Merogis prison south of Gay Paree, where he also met Kouachi.

After their release, both Kouachi and Coulibaly visited Beghal while he was serving out his sentence under house arrest.

Beghal was tossed in the calaboose
Yez got nuttin' on me, coppers! Nuttin'!
again in 2010 as part of a plot to free him as well as Smain Ait Ali Belkacem, an Algerian who helped carry out Gay Paree kabooms in 1995 which killed eight people.

La Belle France has suffered a wave of deadly terror attacks since January 2015 which have claimed nearly 250 lives, prompting the government to make permanent several state of emergency measures as part of a tough new anti-terror law enacted last year.
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Europe
French authorities raid prison cells of radicals
2015-01-27
Getting serious, they are.
[Ynet] The Gay Paree prosecutor's office says authorities have found phones, USB flash drives and other equipment during searches of about 80 prison cells of Islamic turbans after terrorist attacks earlier this month.

The prosecutor's office said Monday that Sherlocks are analyzing the material found in the searches.

Two of the Islamic holy warriors behind the Jan. 7-9 attacks had met in a French prison. They had also been in contact with prominent imprisoned radical Djamel Beghal, convicted of plotting to blow up the US Embassy in Gay Paree.
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Europe
France expels two Algerians
2008-04-07
French Authorities have decided expelling two Algerians to their country of origin this month, on grounds of contributing in forming criminal conspiracy targeting to prepare terror acts and forging official documents, French judicial sources told El Khabar. The French Justice has issued expel decisions, being supported by the Interior Ministry, against two Algerian nationals, served more than 4 years prison, because Paris considers them as threat to its security, the same sources added. If the French Justice expel decisions were implemented, the first expelled is to arrive to Algeria as by 14 April, while the second expelled is to arrive in 20 April.

The expel file has been joined with remarks banning the expelled to enter French territories or any other European country within Schengen space, the sources told El Khabar. France has charged them with preparing terror acts in France and abroad, yet they are not prosecuted by the Algerian Justice, the same sources mentioned.

However, one of the two defendants has been arrested for having links with An Algerian national, namely Djamel Beghali who is serving prison after being charged with participation in preparing terror attacks in Pakistan, Afghanistan, United Arab Emirates, Britain, Germany, Spain and France.
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Britain
Radicalism makes way to skepticism at London mosque
2005-08-29
Invocations of radical Islam no longer resonate in Finsbury Park mosque as it puts its militant past -- including its links with the September 11 attacks in the United States in 2001 -- behind it.
Got rid of the bearded bully boyz, did you? A wise move...
"A new beginning for the mosque," says a banner that hangs over the doorway of the north London mosque, which Friday drew Muslims of all ages, backgrounds and dress. But in the wake of the London bombings last month that killed 56 people, including four apparent Islamist suicide bombers, there is a degree of skepticism over the government's attempts to clamp down on radicalism.
"Nope. Nope. That'll never work."
Once the lair of hook-handed cleric Abu Hamza, the mosque -- whose more notorious worshippers have included "shoe bomber" Richard Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui, the only person charged in the United States in connection with September 11 -- reopened under new administration in February. Some 500 attend the mosque on average, mostly Muslims of Somalian, north African, Bangladeshi and Pakistani background, said Mustafa al-Mansur, the mosque's spokesman, who is himself from Bangladesh. "There are two types of people. There are people who stopped coming because of the previous management because they didn't feel safe or comfortable, and there are people who didn't care," he told AFP. "We don't see any recognizable faces any more," he added. "Since Abu Hamza left, the mosque was closed for several months. When Abu Hamza left there was a sigh of relief... Even some Abu Hamza supporters thanked us."
I guess they would. As faithful minions, they'd have to look at him...
Egyptian-born Abu Hamza was detained by the British authorities in May 2004 on a US demand for his extradition to face charges of aiding Al-Qaeda and setting up an alleged terrorist training camp in Oregon state. He had already lost his grip on the mosque, in January 2003, when police raided the premises, leaving him to preach on the sidewalk. He denies involvement in terrorism; his lieutenants have slipped out of sight.
"Mahmoud, da boss has lost his grip on da mosque! What should we do?"
"Let's go skulk somewhere, Ahmed!"
In his day, Finsbury Park mosque saw a number of would-be terrorist suspects pass through its doors, including Reid, Moussaoui -- once branded the 20th September 11 hijacker -- and Djamel Beghal, convicted in France for plotting to attack US interests in 2002. This past Friday a Pakistani imam, Souhaib Hassan, preached to his fellow Muslims in English -- seasoned with quotations in Arabic -- on morality and the qualities one needs in order to marry in the Islamic faith. "The mosque does not set an agenda for Friday prayers (but) we try to make sure that whoever we bring here to speak respects certain boundaries," Mansur explained. "I think Muslims can police themselves within their religious practice," he added, criticising what he called "draconian rules" set out by Prime Minister Tony Blair in the wake of the London bombings.
"I mean, we've done such a good job of it to this point!"
Those measures notably include deportation of foreign-born Muslims deemed to be sympathetic to terrorism.
I'm sure Draco would be proud. But he'd also consider it mere common sense. Draco, in fact, would probably have had them bumped off.
Outside the mosque Friday, two members of the Islamist party Hizb-ut-Tahrir collected signatures on a petition to protest the government's measures and Blair's intended ban on their movement. "Tony Blair has made himself a laughing stock," said Mansur of the prime minister who was already unpopular among many Muslims in Britain for having sided with the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.
So why aren't you laughing, Turban Top?
"He is the new sheikh for the Muslims. You will hear names like 'mufti Blair' or 'sheikh Blair'."
He likes being addressed as "effendi." When you're granted an audience, don't forget to bump your forehead on the floor three times before approaching him.
Mansur cast doubt on the effectiveness of Blair's strategy, saying that if Muslims are "radicalising", it is not because of people hearing fiery sermons, "but because of what they see in the media".
All the dynamite boyz who used to hang on Captain Hook's every word were mere coincidence.
"Muslims will sympathize with other Muslims in the world. They look for a channel to vent their anger."
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Britain
ICT commentary on the London bombings
2005-07-08
Security experts have contended for many years that the UK is a safe haven for radical Islamic terror networks, which exploit British freedoms to further their goals. Among the factors contributing to the ease with which these groups operate is the UK’s liberal immigration policy, the many flaws in the border control system, and freedom from the obligation to carry identity cards. Britain has in the past meticulously upheld the rights of the individual, including the right of radical individuals to orchestrate the eradication of the rights of their opponents. Such individuals are protected from prosecution in their countries of origin by British legislation that inhibits the extradition of suspects. At the same time, prosecution in the UK, with its large and influential Muslim community, is fraught with risks of internal strife, or accusation of racism.

As a rule, Western security services have been inadequately equipped to expose and thwart Islamist terrorist activity. This often stems from a lack of familiarity with the ideology and thought processes of the Islamist groups, and their means for translating their beliefs into actions. Intelligence gathering is difficult where such groups are concerned, as they tend to operate in small cells whose members are well known to one another.

It has never been much of a secret that an extensive radical Islamic infrastructure was operating on a large scale in the UK; Islamic charity funds, bank accounts, Islamic web sites, and newspapers in Arabic all serve as legitimate and legal platforms for illegal activities and incitement.

Of the 21 organizations outlawed in Britain since February 2002, 16 are Muslim. In the past, these groups have used London as a headquarters for recruitment and fund-raising only, and for all their fiery rhetoric against the West, they have been scrupulous in not actually targeting British interests on British soil. However, as Britain has come to be seen as the primary ally of the United States in its war on terrorism, radicals have been increasingly open in their intention to attack local targets.

While London has been a center for Islamic extremism for years, it was only after the September 11 attacks in the United States that the activities of militant Islamists began to be taken seriously by British security services. In the past, it was common practices for MI5 and Special Branch to keep a close watch on their activities, but not to interfere in any way. The firebrand clerics who preached jihad and hatred of the West were dismissed as “armchair warriors” by British intelligence and security services.

Nor was the British legal system equipped to deal with British citizens whose only offense was the support of violence in other countries. Under human rights laws, British courts would not allow dissidents who had sought sanctuary to be repatriated to countries that might kill them.

The United Kingdom’s generous asylum laws were often exploited by radicals who fled their homelands to settle in London. These radicals and their supporters raise funds and preach their causes from Islamic centers, mosques, and nondescript offices across the country. The literature of all brands of Islamic political thought is printed, distributed, and read throughout London. Much of it is given out on Fridays at the 100 or more mosques in the city. In some areas of London, videotaped sermons are on sale calling for the killing of all infidels and Jews; leaflets are distributed on street corners urging Muslims to travel to various hotspots around the world to wage Jihad; while radical preachers incite the faithful to take up arms against the “Crusaders and the Jews.”

Militant groups from Kashmir, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Egypt, Algeria and Turkey all raise funds, forge links and disseminate propaganda in the UK. British laxity in pursuing those known to be inciting violence elsewhere enraged the French and Algerian authorities, who coined the term “Londonistan” to refer to a city which harbored known terrorists, allowed the dissemination of their propaganda and the recruitment of zealous new “holy warriors.” Britain is routinely asked by countries such as Sri Lanka and India to help cut off the millions of pounds raised annually from sympathetic migrant communities in the UK and laundered through London financial institutions.

After the attacks of 11th September 2001, Great Britain began to come to terms with the fact that its legal network was outdated and unable to meet the emerging threat. In February 2001, 21 international terror organizations were declared illegal in England, most of them Islamist. New legislation was put into effect enabling the authorities to place suspects under unlimited administrative detention, and banks were empowered to freeze assets and bank accounts of individuals and organizations suspected of involvement in terrorism.

Britain currently is host to members of Egyptian terror organizations such as Islamic Jihad and al-Gamaa al-Islaamiya, or the Algerian Groupe Islamique Armée, and the Palestinian terror groups Hamas and Hizballah. But these overt terrorist groups do not operate openly in London. Instead, they have links with more visible outfits that function as recruiting centers in London. These organizations include:

* Al-Muhajiroun, a virulently anti-American and anti-Semitic radical group headed by Egyptian dissident Omar Bakri Muhamad. Al-Muhajiroun openly calls for the murder of Jews and the institution of a worldwide Islamic religious regime by violent Jihad. After the atrocities in the US he was among the first to praise the attack publicly.

* The Supporters of Sharia’a, based in North London, and headed by Egyptian Sheikh Abu Hamza al-Masri. Abu Hamza was until recently the Imam of the Finsbury Park Mosque, which under his leadership became a center for the recruitment to Jihad of young British Muslims.

Britain has often served as a base for recruitment of would-be Jihadis, who are then sent to other counties to operate terror cells as part of a network of hard-core radical Islamic activists.

In May 2003, two British citizens carried out a suicide attack on behalf of the Palestinian Hamas organization, targeting a popular jazz-pub in Tel-Aviv. Assif Muhammad Hanif and Omar Han Sharif were indicative of the use made of the Jihad recruitment centers in London, which have supplied fighters for Islamist struggles worldwide, from Chechnya to Afghanistan. Shiekh Omar Bakri-Mohammend said that the Islamic Front recruited volunteers in Britain and sent them to Jordan, where they awaited opportunities to infiltrate into the West Bank and join the uprising against Israel.

Abu Hamza Al-Masri is wanted in Yemen for his involvement in dispatching eight British Moslems to perpetrate terror attacks against Western targets in Yemen. So far, the UK has refused all requests from the Yemeni government for al-Masri’s extradition.

After Abu Hamza, welcomed the massacre of 58 European tourists at Luxor in October 1997, Egypt denounced Britain as a hotbed for radicals. The Egyptian State Information Service posted a “Call to Combat Terrorism” on its official web site. Of its 14 most wanted terrorists, seven were based in Britain. Foremost amongst them was Yasser al-Sirri, sentenced to death in absentia for plotting the failed assassination of an Egyptian prime minister, who headed the Islamic Observation Centre in London, a mouthpiece for Egyptian rebels, and for al-Qaida.

The Algerian and French intelligence services were particularly concerned that Abu Hamza’s Finsbury Park mosque was becoming a focal point for Algerian exiles, many of whom remained politically active. Agents who infiltrated the mosque claimed they had evidence of criminal and terrorist activity in addition to the volatile preaching of the imam. One source close to the French investigation said that before the events of September 11 noted that “Britain acted—and, to some extent, may still act—as a kind of filter for parts of al-Qaida,” adding that “the main European centers for spiritual indoctrination were London and Leicester.”

Plots believed linked to British Islamic groups include:

* A plan to bomb the US embassy in Tirana, Albania. Documents prepared for the trial of Misbah Ali Hassanayn, an Egyptian, quote a message from Rome police saying he was suspected of being in touch with “a group of terrorists living in London that was about to carry out an attack on the US embassy in Tirana”.

* A planned attack on the 2000 Christmas market in Strasbourg. Initially, this has been ascribed entirely to a Frankfurt-based group but a Milan police report indicates that hit men sent from Britain were to have played the key role.

* Italian court papers point to the involvement of Abu Doha, a London-based radical in a prospective attack on the US embassy in Rome. In January 2001, the embassy was closed. Court papers say the US had been tipped off to a possible attack. Doha was described as “the person in charge”.

* A suicide attack by helicopter or lorry on the US embassy in Paris was planned by a group linked to al-Qaida, which including Djamel Beghal and Kamel Daoudi, who had lived in Britain.

After 9/11 the British security services woke up to the possibility that the same militants who were exporting terrorism to other countries could just as easily turn their weapons upon their host country. Parliament passed a new anti-terrorism act, reversing centuries of tradition and making it illegal for anyone in Britain to promote armed struggle abroad.

In January of 2002, British military intelligence searching Osama bin Laden’s cave complex in the mountains of Tora Bora eastern Afghanistan found the names of 1,200 British citizens, all Muslims, who trained with the Al-Qaida network in Afghanistan.

The discovery was made public in January of 2003. Many of those who survived the defeat of the Taliban are now believed to be back in Britain and some may have formed terrorist cells. Many have gone underground to avoid detection.

The two British suicide bombers sent to Israel are part and parcel of the same phenomenon currently sweeping the Muslim world, in which young Muslims are induced to sacrifice their lives in the name of Jihad. Al-Muhajiroun activist Hassan Butt, who returned to Britain during 2002 from Pakistan, said that he estimated the number of suicide bombers waiting to carry out operations as more than fifty. He added that most of them are currently in Britain, although not necessarily active members of Al-Muhajiroun. He did state, however, that most of them had received religious lessons in Britain and that they had been taught that jihad was a priority. According to Butt, British Muslim volunteers in Afghanistan would return to the U.K. to “strike at the heart of the enemy.”
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Britain
Al-Qaeda member is a child abductor, court hears
2005-04-21
An al-Qaeda member helped abduct five children from Norfolk to Libya, a court heard on Wednesday.

The children disappeared after spending the day with their Libyan father, Azzedin Journazi, in June 2000.

On Wednesday the court was the told the father enlisted a group of people, including Djamel Beghal, of al-Qaeda.

Mustapha Abushima, 38, and Wedad Ahmed, 45, of Manchester, deny conspiring with others to abduct the children. The children remain in Libya.

The children's mother Anita Elgirnazi, 36, told Norwich Crown Court she eventually managed to contact them after acquiring a telephone number for her former husband's family.

Beghal, 39, was described as being a key member of an "extreme and puritanical group" financed by Osama Bin Laden, Norwich Crown Court heard.

Beghal, an Algerian, was sentenced to 10 years in prison earlier this year for associating with a terrorist organisation.

In a statement he admitted making the cross channel reservations - but said he thought the children were going to Disneyland Paris.

The children were snatched from their mother on 10 June 2000.

The prosecution alleges that their Libyan father Azzedin Journazi devised a plan to take them and recruited seven people including Beghal to help.

At the time Rumaysa Elgirnazi was 11, Safiya Elgirnazi, nine, Ali Elgirnazi, seven, Hamza Elgirnazi, four, and Aisha Elgirnazi, two.

The court was told by defence lawyer Martin Taylor that Beghal was a key member of a group called Takfir-Wal-Hirja, financed by Bin Laden. "In that group Beghal was described even amongst the extremists, he stood out as being one of the most dangerous," said Mr Taylor. The trial was adjourned until Thursday.
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Britain
Ricin plot may have been the end of the Abu Doha network
2005-04-15
THE failed al-Qaeda plot to carry out a chemical attack in Britain may have been the final act of an extensive terrorist network established by a leading Algerian Islamist. Kamel Bourgass, who is expected to spend at least 30 years in prison for the ricin conspiracy and the murder of Detective Constable Stephen Oake, was part of a worldwide cell headed by the notorious Abu Doha.

Bourgass was just one of the fanatics recruited, inspired and guided by Doha, 39, who is also known as Dr Haider, the Doctor, Rachid, Amar Makhlulif and Didier Ajuelos.

Others included Ahmed Ressam, jailed in the United States over a planned millennium bomb attack on Los Angeles airport, and Nizar Trabelsi, in prison in Belgium for plotting to blow up a Nato airbase.

Those in the front line against terrorism are reluctant to claim that the Abu Doha network has been wound up. "It would be foolhardy to say it was finished," a senior anti-terrorist officer said. "The Abu Doha network is very resilient and our experience shows that these networks do change and can mutate very quickly."

But the thwarting of the ricin plot was a major success and since then the bulk of terror threats in Britain have come from different cells, often of Asian or domestic origin. Doha was a member of the Salafist Group for Call and Combat (GSPC), a terrorist group which has carried out widespread atrocities in Algeria. In 1998, according to a US indictment, he won permission from Osama bin Laden to set up the Khalden training camp in Afghanistan for Algerians and other North Africans. Hundreds trained at Khalden and some who have since been arrested have testified that bin Laden visited regularly. Many left to fight alongside Islamists in Chechnya, but others were encouraged to base themselves in the West and carry out attacks there.

With his camp established, Doha stationed himself in North London amid the growing Algerian population fleeing the bitter conflict in their homeland. The Finsbury Park mosque was a focal point for the community. Authorising the detention of one of his associates, a judge described Doha as "a senior terrorist". Mr Justice Ouseley said: "In Afghanistan, he had held a senior position in training camps organising the passage of Mujahidin volunteers to and from those camps. He had a wide range of extremist Islamic contacts inside and outside the United Kingdom, including links to individuals involved in terrorist operations. He was involved in a number of extremist agendas.

"By being in the United Kingdom, he had brought cohesion to Algerian extremists based here and he had strengthened the existing links with individuals associated with the terrorist training facilities in Afghanistan and in Pakistan."

Doha was in regular phone contact with Ressam, whose plan to attack Los Angeles airport was foiled when he was arrested near Seattle with explosives and detonators in his car. Ressam had been refused refugee status in Montreal and was the subject of an immigration arrest warrant. Facing a 130-year jail term in the US he agreed to co-operate with the FBI and provided invaluable intelligence.

In December 2000 German police raided a flat in Frankfurt and found bomb-making equipment. Four men were arrested. They also discovered a recent video of the Christmas market in Strasbourg, France, with a commentary describing the crowds as "enemies of God". The German authorities had acted after a tip-off from British Intelligence which had intercepted a phone call between one of the men and Doha. Four men, three of whom had lived in Britain, were jailed by a German court for the plot in March 2003. Doha himself was arrested at Heathrow airport in February 2001 attempting to board a flight to Saudi Arabia with a false passport. A search of his London home recovered false passports and diagrams for bombs similar to those found in Ressam's possession. Doha remains in Belmarsh prison, southeast London, fighting extradition to the US.

Such is the nature of the al-Qaeda phenomenon — with its activists trained to be freelance, self-sufficient operators — that his network continued without him. Rabah Kadre, known as Toufiq, took command. In July 2001 Djamel Beghal, who had lived in Leicester, was arrested in Dubai and allegedly admitted a plot to attack the US Embassy in Paris. He is in prison in France.

Days after the September 11 attacks Nizar Trabelsi, a Tunisian former professional footballer, was detained in Brussels in possession of bomb-making materials. He had trained in Afghanistan, volunteered to be a suicide bomber and is in jail for plotting to attack the Kleine Brogel Nato airbase.

In December 2001 emergency powers were introduced to detain foreign terror suspects without trial. Many of those rounded up were associates of Doha. They are now free under the terms of terrorist control orders. Almost a year later the network suffered another blow when its new head, Kadre, was arrested in London. Police believe that he had come to activate the ricin plot. Two months later the poisons conspiracy was smashed and Bourgass was arrested. The authorities dare not say it out loud, but their very real hope is that the Doha cell is finally defunct.
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Europe
Six sentenced over Paris bomb plot
2005-03-15
A Paris court has sentenced a French-Algerian, Djamel Beghal, to 10 years in jail for plotting to bomb the US embassy in France in 2001. Beghal, 39, was on trial with five other alleged militant Islamists. They got jail terms of one to nine years. Beghal, arrested in Dubai in July 2001, retracted a confession he had made there, alleging it was extracted by torture during weeks of questioning. He had said the bomb plot idea had come from al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. Beghal was found guilty of "criminal association in relation with a terrorist enterprise". Co-defendant Kamel Daoudi, a 30-year-old computer expert, received a nine-year jail sentence. Both Beghal and Daoudi allegedly spent time at al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan in 2001.
Didn't everyyone?

The prosecution claimed the plot was hatched in Afghanistan with a leading al-Qaeda militant, Abu Zubaydah, captured in March 2002. Beghal denied at the trial ever having met the Saudi-born Palestinian. In his confession, Beghal had allegedly identified a professional footballer, Nizar Trabelsi, as the chosen suicide bomber. Trabelsi is currently serving a 10-year prison sentence in Belgium, on other charges. The plot is reported to have included plans to target a US cultural centre in Paris as well as the US embassy. Trabelsi's alleged task was to enter the US embassy, just off the Place de la Concorde, with explosives strapped to his body, and blow himself up. A van packed with explosives would have been driven separately to the US cultural centre, also in the heart of Paris, and detonated. Trabelsi, who denies the claim, is currently in jail in Belgium for planning to bomb a military base on an al-Qaeda mission. Beghal was accused of recruiting members for his network in the southern suburbs of Paris, including his brother-in-law Johann Bonte, who was also on trial. Asked if he regarded himself a radical, Beghal testified: "I am a Muslim and Muslim to the hilt."
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Europe
Tightening al-Qaeda's European grip
2005-02-21
When he was arrested in Dubai in July 2001, Djamel Beghal, a French Algerian already known to French services, confessed he had been ordered by Osama bin Laden's top lieutenant, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, to set up a terrorist cell to strike US interests in France. He admitted he had attended meetings in Afghanistan's training camps in preparation to blow up the US Embassy in Paris. But when he was later extradited to France, Beghal denied any involvement in terrorist activities. During his trial in Paris, Beghal delivered a detailed testimony accusing Emirates interrogators of having psychologically and physically tortured him to accept an already established scenario. "This attack never existed, neither in my imagination, nor in reality," said Beghal.

Beghal, who is being judged with five co-defendants, is accused of recruiting terrorists and leading a terrorist cell in France with ramifications throughout Western Europe in Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain, Germany and the United Kingdom.

Last week, the prosecution requested a 10-year prison sentence against Beghal, 39, and his suspected accomplice Kamel Daoudi, 30, the legal maximum for the "association of bandits in connection with a terrorist enterprise". The verdict is expected on March 15.

Beghal's arrest subsequently led to the dismantlement of the so-called "Beghal network" in Corbeil-Essonnes, France, where he had lived until 1997, before leaving for the United Kingdom - where he met the influential Salafist preacher Abu Qatada - and later Germany and Pakistan. The kamikaze in the alleged planned attack would have been Tunisian Nizar Trabelsi, a former soccer player. Trabelsi was arrested in Belgium in September 2001, two days after the September 11 attacks, and sentenced to 10 years in jail two years later. He admitted he was preparing a terrorist attack, but said his target was a military base in Belgium.

Beghal's main co-defendant Kamel Daoudi, a computer scientist suspected of taking care of the logistics, was arrested in England and extradited to France. Last June, four members of the network were sentenced in the Netherlands, including French convert Jerome Courtailler.

Like Zakarias Moussaoui and shoe bomber Richard Reid, among others, Beghal attended the now famous Finsbury Park mosque led by Abu Hamza al-Masri. Several well-known Islamic radicals - among whom many have been involved in terrorism plots - found sanctuary in Great Britain, a country labelled "soft" on religious extremism.

From the early 1990s, North African militants - mainly immigrants who failed to fully integrate into their host country and turned to radical Islam, and a few converts - established sleeper cells in several European countries. At that time the ongoing Algerian civil war was partly fought from Europe, from the French neighborhoods to London, where Islamic leaders organized their support for armed groups in their war against the Algerian state.

According to experts, Algerian-linked terrorist groups were actually prominent until 2001. "They were fierce, they had grand schemes [they hijacked an Air France airbus leaving for Paris in 1994]," says Evan Kohlmann, author of al-Qaeda's Jihad in Europe.

Most al-Qaeda cells discovered in Europe have links to the Algerian Salafist Group for Prayer and Combat, known by its acronym GSPC, an organization suspected in several terrorist plots in Europe and the United States. A splinter group of the Armed Islamic Groups (GIA), GSPC was created under the initiative of bin Laden by GIA emir Hassan Hattab in 1998. A year earlier, the GIA had started losing foreign support due to its massive slaughter of Algerian civilians. Bin Laden, who had previously supported the GIA, financed this new Salafist organization which would distinguish itself from the then discredited GIA in order to continue to fight the "jihad" in Algeria.

The GSPC is accused of planning attacks during the soccer World Cup held in Paris in 1998 and against the Strasbourg Christmas market and cathedral in 2000. "GSPC remains a grave threat in Europe. There are networks linked to al-Qaeda and GSPC in England, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain ... This network of North Africans will continue to be a threat to international security in the short and long term," explains researcher Jonathan Schanzer.

According to Kohlmann, the Algerian branch is "still there but not as influential" today. More recent organizations like the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group (GICM), "the children of the GIA and GSPC", learned from their predecessors' mistakes and are now taking the lead of the terrorist network in the region. The GICM was involved in the terrorist attacks in Casablanca in May 2003 and Madrid in March 2004.

But although it has been weakened due to heavy losses in its ranks, the GSPC continues to be a nightmare for Algerian security services. On January 3, 18 soldiers and militiamen were killed in an ambush set up by the GSPC in the area of Biskra. Two policemen were later killed and one civilian was injured when suspected GSPC militants attacked a foot patrol in Tizi Ghenif, 100 kilometers southeast of Algiers.

While vowing to maintain efforts to fight the GSPC, Algerian authorities have publicly expressed satisfaction at the near eradication of the GIA. With the killing last July of former GIA chief Rachid Oukali - alias Abou Tourab - publicly announced, as well as the death last December of its last chief Younes - alias Lyes - they proudly claimed only "about 30" GIA fighters were still at large.

The GIA, responsible for the blind murder of civilians, the targeted killings of intellectuals and the Paris metro bombings in 1995, had greatly declined in recent years. An amnesty launched in 1999 by Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, followed by hundreds of fighters, divided the group, already torn by internal power struggles.

Lately, amid a heated debate surrounding an expansion of the amnesty, Algerian leaders promised the same fate to the GSPC, which has lost several members in military operations in recent months. But last Sunday, the GSPC announced the exclusion of its founder Hattab, officially for accepting the amnesty proposal. The group is now part of the global al-Qaeda nebula. Recently, it re-expressed its ties to al-Qaeda by vowing allegiance to al-Zarqawi. In a statement on January 24, GSPC leader Abu Musab Abdel Wadoud expressed his congratulations to al-Zarqawi in response to the latter's message to international al-Qaeda "affiliate" organizations, among which the GSPC was included.

Despite its weakening presence at home, the group may indeed be poised to pursue a different path on both shores of the Mediterranean Sea. "The European network of the GSPC is sufficiently distinct and separate from its Algerian counterpart that it can survive independently," explains Kohlmann. "I think it is significant that Hassan Hattab has surrendered [apparently] because he was not in favor of using international terrorism as a prime instrument of policy. Those who have succeeded him in the GSPC harbor no such reservations. You might say that Hattab's downfall may ironically serve to remove a previous political roadblock to GSPC-inspired terrorist attacks in Europe."
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Europe
Officials: Militants Targeted Eiffel Tower
2005-02-17
Islamic militants under investigation for allegedly planning an attack on the Russian Embassy in Paris had other targets on their list, including the Eiffel Tower, police and judicial officials said Wednesday. Three men, all Algerians, were detained Jan. 11 in connection with an investigation into a network of Islamic radicals supporting Chechen rebels, the officials said on condition of anonymity. More than 20 people have been jailed in a series of arrests since December 2002 as part of an investigation into the network. The investigation revealed an alleged plot against the Russian Embassy and a planned chemical attack.

On Wednesday, judicial officials confirmed the three arrests, which were first reported by the daily Le Parisien. The newspaper said attacks in Britain were also allegedly planned and that those arrested in France had links to a group of Islamic radicals in Spain. According to judicial officials, the three men said among the targets was the veritable symbol of France, the Eiffel Tower. Also targeted were a clothing store in the central Paris district of Les Halles, which is a commuter link packed with people, Israeli interests and police stations, officials said. Money from a French network making false papers was allegedly taken to Spain to finance sending Islamic combatants to Chechnya, the paper reported without citing sources.

Separately, the trial of six men accused of targeting the U.S. Embassy in Paris ended Wednesday. The men denied plans for a suicide attack on the embassy and insisted they were simply friends, not a terror group. "I sleep well and I'm tranquil because I have done nothing wrong," the alleged ringleader, Djamel Beghal, told the court. "I have no network. I have friends."
"I have an MCI calling circle."
The verdict in that case — not connected to the Chechnya investigation — was deferred until March 15. More than 20 people have been arrested in France in the two-year investigation into the alleged network supporting Chechen rebels. Officials have claimed some of the arrests stopped a chemical attack in France. Investigators believe the heart of the network was dismantled in December 2002 with the arrests of nine suspects in two Paris suburbs. Three of those suspects trained with rebels and met "high-level al-Qaida operatives" in Georgia's Pankisi Gorge, near its border with Russia, the Interior Ministry said at the time.
But the Georgians assured us that the Pankisi Gorge had been cleaned out.
Among the top suspects is Menad Benchellali whose brother, Mourad, was held by the United States in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, but was among four prisoners returned in July to France, where he remains jailed the French being venal but not stupid. His father, an imam, or Muslim prayer leader, his mother and another brother were placed under investigation in January 2004. The raids leading to the initial arrests turned up chemical formulas for explosives and a substance that, when subjected to heat or put in contact with water, would let off a highly toxic gas, judicial officials have said. Lists of chemicals and their price and a suit to protect against chemical attacks were among other items found.
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Europe
French call for 10 years for car bomb plotter
2005-02-11
A prosecutor in France Wednesday called for a maximum 10-year prison sentence against an Islamic militant accused of plotting a suicide car-bombing of the US embassy in Paris in 2002. Djamel Beghal, 39, who is suspected of being the leader of five other men standing trial in the alleged plot, was arrested at Dubai airport July 28, 2001. The prosecution has maintained that he was on his way back to France to carry out the bombing when he was detained.
"Welcome to Gay Paree. Stick 'em up!"
According to the prosecution, Beghal confessed to having twice met with Abu Zubaydah, a top aide to Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, at a training camp in Afghanistan in March 2001. It is alleged Abu Zubaydah told him to organise a cell in Paris to plan the embassy attack. French investigators say Beghal, a Franco-Algerian, was the operational mastermind behind a radical Islamist cell that had contacts in Britain, Belgium, Spain, the Netherlands and Germany. The other members of the group, including computer expert Kamel Daoudi, were identified in surveillance operations conducted after Beghal's arrest.
If I was named Camel Doody, I'd become a terrorist, too.
The prosecutor, Christophe Teissier, also requested a maximum 10-year jail term for Daoudi and terms of between five and eight years for the other four accused. The trial is expected to end on February 16, but it will be several weeks before a final judgement is known.
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