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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

India-Pakistan
After Maryam’s arrest, Shahbaz may lead AJK rally on 15th
2019-08-12
[DAWN] A PML-N huddle, with the party president in the chair here on Saturday, asked Shahbaz Sharif
...Pak dynastic politician, brother of PM Nawaz Sharif, chief minister of Punjab...
to resume the rallies from where his niece Maryam left.

"The opposition leader in the National Assembly agreed to the suggestion, saying the workers conventions in different cities across the country will continue and the PML-N will not be cowed by the arm-twisting tactics of the Imran Khan
...aka The Great Khan, who is the lightweight's lightweight...
government," a party insider told Dawn after the meeting.

The meeting was held in Model Town and attended by Ahsan Iqbal, Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, Rana Tanvir Hussain, Marriyum Aurangzeb, Khurram Dastgir, Awais Leghari, Pervaiz Malik and retired Capt Safdar.

Before her arrest in the Chaudhry Sugar Mills case on Thursday, PML-N Vice President Maryam Nawaz was apparently pulling large crowds in rallies across Punjab
1.) Little Orphan Annie's bodyguard
2.) A province of Pakistain ruled by one of the Sharif brothers
3.) A province of India. It is majority (60 percent) Sikh and Hindoo (37 percent), which means it has relatively few Moslem riots....

and was scheduled to lead a public gathering in Muzaffarabad on Aug 15 to express solidarity with the people of India-held Kashmir
...a disputed territory lying between India and Pakistain. After partition, the Paks grabbed half of it and call it Azad (Free) Kashmir. The remainder the refer to as "Indian Occupied Kashmir". They have fought four wars with India over it, the score currently 4-0 in New Delhi's favor. After 72 years of this nonsense, India cut the Gordian knot in 2019, removing the area's special status, breaking off Ladakh as a separate state, and allowing people from other areas to settle (or in the case of the Pandits, to resettle) there....
There was an opinion in the meeting that Mr Sharif should lead the Muzaffarabad rally as it would serve as a perfect platform for giving a strong reply to the Modi government as well as launching a scathing attack on Prime Minister Imran Khan for, what the PML-N alleged, "selling out Kashmir".
Related:
Shahbaz Sharif: 2019-08-06 Arrest warrants for Salman Shahbaz issued
Shahbaz Sharif: 2019-07-05 Shahbaz sees a ‘Hitler-like fascist’ in Imran
Shahbaz Sharif: 2019-04-24 NAB says it has arrested 'suspects who laundered money for Shahbaz Sharif's family'
Related:
Maryam Nawaz: 2019-08-10 NAB deputy prosecutor general says was targeted in gun attack
Maryam Nawaz: 2019-08-09 Nawaz, Maryam face another corruption reference
Maryam Nawaz: 2019-08-09 Maryam Nawaz arrested by NAB in Chaudhry Sugar Mills reference
Related:
Muzaffarabad: 2019-08-08 Pakistan urged to move beyond diplomatic support for occupied Kashmir
Muzaffarabad: 2019-07-30 AJK woman killed, 7 injured in latest 'unprovoked' ceasefire violation by Indian troops
Muzaffarabad: 2019-03-09 'UN charter fully empowers Kashmiris to take up arms against occupation,' says AJK premier
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Britain
Airline Bomb Plotters Convicted
2010-07-08
Ibrahim Savant, Arafat Khan and Waheed Zaman were convicted by a jury at Woolwich Crown Court. The three men were among eight tried in connection with an al Qaida-inspired plot to detonate homemade liquid bombs on transatlantic jets.

They were cleared by a jury of their role in targeting aeroplanes but put on trial again to face charges of conspiracy to murder. A Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) spokesman said the jury found all three men guilty today.

Savant, of Denver Road, Stoke Newington, Khan, of Farnan Avenue, Walthamstow, and Zaman, of Queen's Road, Walthamstow, will be sentenced tomorrow.

Abdulla Ahmed Ali, of Walthamstow, Assad Sarwar, of High Wycombe, and Tanvir Hussain, of Leyton, were found guilty of the airline bomb plot last year.

The al Qaida-inspired plot led by Ali involved smuggling liquid bombs in drinks bottles on to planes bound for North America. The hydrogen peroxide devices would have been assembled and detonated in mid-air by a team of suicide bombers.

Ali singled out seven flights to San Francisco, Toronto, Montreal, Washington, New York and Chicago that departed within two and a half hours of each other. If successful, the explosions could have exceeded the carnage of the September 11 attacks.

The arrest of the gang in August 2006 sparked tight restrictions on carrying liquids on to aircraft which initially caused travel chaos.
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Britain
Jihad suspect has terror case thrown out
2010-02-02
A judge has thrown out the case against a man accused of preparing terrorist acts after ruling he had no case to answer.

Prosecutors had alleged that Mohammed Usman Saddique (aged 27) of Walthamstow, east London, England, kept jihadist books and CDs at his home and had contact with convicted members of a plot to blow up transatlantic jets. But the trial, which was being heard at Inner London Crown Court, was aborted yesterday after his defence put in a submission to have it dismissed.

The jury had earlier heard that Mr Saddique possessed extremist documents at his home. One CD found at the premises had a folder entitled "Anarchy" which itself contained a subfolder titled "bombs". Files on it carried instructions on how to make explosives, the court heard.
The little sod was organized, at least.
That's little Saud to you ...
In an earlier statement, Mr Saddique confirmed that some of the jihadist material found in his house was his but said they were in his possession "out of curiosity" and were not being kept "with any malicious intent".

It was also alleged during the trial that the accused man knew and associated with convicted conspirators of an attempted terrorist plot. Telephone records linked him to Abdulla Ahmed Ali and Tanvir Hussain, prosecutors said. Both men were convicted, alongside Assad Sarwar, in September last year of conspiracy to murder by the detonation of improvised explosive devices on board transatlantic passenger aircraft.

The cost of that lengthy trial and retrial ran into the tens of millions of pounds, legal sources estimated at the time. It also led to demands for an apology by Muslim convert Donald Stewart-Whyte, who was cleared by the jury of involvement in the plot.

Referring to the collapse of the case against Mr Sadddique, a spokeswoman for the Crown Prosecution Service said: "The judge felt it should go to trial. Having heard the prosecution case and the defence submission of no case to answer, the judge has decided that the case should not continue."
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India-Pakistan
Nazims' reign ends in three provinces
2010-01-02
[Dawn] The local government system became a provincial subject after midnight on Thursday.

Provinces have decided to retain the system after making some amendments required in their jurisdictions.

Except in Sindh, all district Nazims will stop functioning from Jan 1 and administrators from the bureaucracy will be appointed to serve in their place till fresh LB elections are held.

President Asif Ali Zardari, on the advice of Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani, deleted laws concerning local governments from the sixth schedule of the Constitution.

Deletion of Balochistan Local Government Ordinance, 2001 (XVIII of 2001), North West Frontier Province Local Government Ordinance, 2001 (XIV of 2001), Punjab Local Government Ordinance, 2001 (XIII of 2001) and Sindh Local Government Ordinance, 2001 (XXVI of 2001) allowed the provinces to make changes in the local government laws.

The president's spokesman, Farhatullah Babar, said Mr Zardari described it as a new year gift to the nation which would promote provincial harmony.

"As the clock strikes midnight heralding the advent of 2010, the provinces are free to make their own laws relating to the local bodies either through legislation or ordinances. They are free to hold fresh elections or appoint administrators."

A press release issued by the Prime Minister's House said Mr Gilani observed that the provinces, according to their need and circumstances, may make laws and hold local bodies' elections. He further observed that omission of laws from the sixth schedule was a valuable dividend of democracy.

It is believed that there would be no uniformity in the LG system in the provinces because some will retain it while some will scrap it.

It has been learnt that except for Sindh, administrators would be appointed soon in provinces till the holding of fresh elections.

President Zardari has expressed the desire that the provinces should hold fresh LG polls within 90 days.

However, Punjab and NWFP governments have decided to hold elections in three and six months respectively. "Our party has prepared a bill concerning amendments in the LG system and it is likely to be passed soon," PML-N Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal told Dawn.

He advocated non-uniformity in the LG system, saying the provinces should have autonomy to take a decision according to their conditions and requirements. "Actually the uniformity in the system was desired by former president Pervez Musharraf who wanted to control the provinces through the LG ordinance," Mr Ahsan alleged.

ANP's senior leader Haji Adeel said his party had also prepared a draft bill containing proposed amendments in the LG system. Fresh election would be held within six months, he added.

Former chairman of the National Reconstruction Bureau Daniyal Aziz, who along with his predecessor Gen (retd) Tanvir Hussain Naqvi, gave a new concept of LG system, told Dawn that the system should not be wrapped up and if required amendments should be made.

He said he had been urging the provincial governments not to scrap the system because it was made for the betterment of people and to delegate powers to the grassroots level.

Mr Aziz recalled Article 140-A of the Constitution, which says: "Each province shall, by law, establish a local government system and devolve political, administrative and financial responsibility and authority to the 'elected representatives' of the local governments."

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement has rejected the proposal to appoint administrators and said the Sindh government should hold LG elections in three months.

When the term of LGs lapsed in October, the Punjab government had sent a resolution, or draft amendment, to the president with three main points: appointment of administrators, revival of magistracy and postponing of LG polls.

Not only Punjab but the NWFP and Balochistan have also demanded that the local governments' mandate should be restricted to municipal functions. Uplift projects and tax functions should be reviewed and assigned accordingly, the suggested.

They pleaded that law and order should be purely a provincial subject and executive magistracy should be introduced.

Meanwhile, a senior official of the ministry of local government said the provinces did not want wrapping up of the whole LG system, but demanded some amendments to put it under provincial set-up.
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Britain
British Pakistanis sentenced for role in airline bomb plot
2009-12-11
[The News (Pak) Top Stories] A 23-year-old man who conspired with the airline bomb plotters to murder people was on Thursday jailed for life.
Hurrah for the British judicial system -- this time.
Adam Khatib plotted with Abdullah Ahmed Ali, Asad Sarwar and Tanvir Hussain to murder persons unknown between January and August 2006, according to details provided by the metropolitan police.

He was found guilty of conspiring together with the three, and with Umar Islam, who was found guilty of conspiracy to murder in an earlier trial at Woolwich Crown Court. He must serve a minimum of 18 years.

Another man, Nabeel Hussain, who met Ahmed Ali Khan, just weeks before officers from the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command made arrests in August 2006, was found guilty of a terrorist offence and jailed for eight years. All the men are said to be of Pakistani origin with British nationalities.
At the end of their sentences strip them of their citizenship and send them home.
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Britain
3 UK men accused of providing aid to aircraft plot
2009-10-07
A British prosecutor accused three men Tuesday of conspiring with the mastermind of a plot to kill thousands of airline passengers by blowing up their trans-Atlantic flights using liquid explosives.

Prosecutor Peter Wright was making his opening statement on the second day of the trial of Adam Khatib, 22, Mohammed Shamin Uddin, 39, and Nabeel Hussain, 25. Authorities say if the attack had been carried out, it would have been on par with the Sept. 11 attacks.

The trio "was prepared to help in the commission of terrorist acts and indeed did so," Wright told jurors at a London court. All three deny the charges but have yet to present their cases.

Last month, Abdulla Ahmed Ali was convicted of being the ringleader of a plan to down at least seven trans-Atlantic flights in simultaneous attacks which security officials say were directed by senior Islamic militants in Pakistan. He was given a minimum of 40 years in prison. Two others — Assad Sarwar and Tanvir Hussain — were also convicted of helping plot the attacks.
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Britain
Airline Bomb Plot Reveals Links to Pakistan
2009-09-09
[Asharq al-Aswat] A plot to blow up at least seven transatlantic aircraft using liquid bombs was masterminded from Pakistan, intelligence services said as more details emerged Tuesday of the complex planned attacks.

British police were forced to go to extraordinary lengths to build their case against the men who prosecutors say were hoping to cause more deaths than the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The trial, which ended in the convictions of three British Muslims on Monday, was peppered with evidence that members of the London-based gang were frequently in communication with figures linked to Al-Qaeda in Pakistan.

"In terms of Al-Qaeda involvement, there is a large part of this plot that has been thought through or invented in Pakistan," one senior counter-terrorism source said after the trial.

The jury were shown intercepted emails in which Abdulla Ahmed Ali, 28, Tanvir Hussain, 28, and Assad Sarwar, 29, asked Pakistani contacts for advice on building bombs in drinks bottles to detonate on flights over the Atlantic.

Prosecutors believe the absence of evidence establishing these links had led to a jury in the men's first trial in 2008 failing to reach a verdict that they had plotted to blow up the planes, forcing a second trial to be held.

Ken MacDonald, the former head of the Crown Prosecution Service and Director of Public Prosecutions, said: "We felt that this was a strong case from the start, unfortunately the jury in the first trial could not agree.

"The additional evidence that we had (in the second trial) were the emails," he told BBC radio.

The emails were obtained by a court order in California requiring Yahoo! to disclose them.

Reports said the men's main point of contact was Rashid Rauf, a British-born Muslim who fled to the tribal areas of Pakistan in 2002 after the murder of his uncle and developed strong links with Al-Qaeda.

Intelligence services also reportedly believe he was a key contact of the gang in the 2005 bombings of the London transport system which killed 52 people.

The trial heard that Ali had already been identified as a dangerous radical when he was stopped at London's Heathrow Airport in June 2006 on his return from a trip to Pakistan.

Customs officials found a large quantity of batteries and a high-sugar powdered drink in his luggage. Both are ingredients for homemade bombs.

He was not arrested, but police broke into his flat one night and installed hidden cameras and microphones.

Over the next few months, they watched as Ali and his colleagues experimented with injecting drinks bottles with a mixture of the explosive liquid hydrogen peroxide which they planned to carry on to flights and detonate with a bulb filament.

But the biggest counter-terrorism operation ever mounted in Britain, costing 35 million pounds (57 million dollars, 40 million euros), was reportedly almost thrown into jeopardy by US intervention.

Fearful that the gang were close to carrying out the plane bombings, the US authorities put pressure on Pakistan to arrest Rauf in 2006.

Andy Hayman, a senior police commander who worked on the case, said in the Times newspaper that his detention "hampered our evidence-gathering and placed us in Britain under intolerable pressure."

British police were confident that they had the gang completely under surveillance, but Rauf's arrest forced them to bring forward the arrests in Britain when they would have preferred to wait longer.

Rauf escaped from police custody in Pakistan in mysterious circumstances in 2007.

US officials said they believed they killed him in an attack with an unmanned drone but his death has never been confirmed.

The discovery of the plot in 2006 sparked chaos at airports, as authorities worldwide immediately introduced draconian regulations limiting the amount of liquids that passengers can carry on to flights.

Many of the rules remain in place.
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Britain
Three British men guilty of airline bomb plot
2009-09-08
[Al Arabiya Latest] Three Britons were found guilty on Monday of plotting to kill thousands by blowing up transatlantic airliners using liquid explosives, in near-simultaneous attacks aimed to cause massive loss of life.

Ringleader Abdulla Ahmed Ali was found guilty of conspiring to murder thousands in the plot, whose discovery triggered wide-ranging new rules on carrying liquids on commercial aircraft. Tanvir Hussain, 28, and Assad Sarwar, 29, were found guilty on the same charges of plotting to carry out bombings on aircraft flying from London's Heathrow airport to the United States and Canada.

The three men were previously found guilty of conspiracy to murder, but the jury in their first trial could not decide on charges that they had plotted to kill people by bringing down airliners.

Four other men were found not guilty of the plot and the jury failed to reach a verdict in the case of an eighth suspect, Britain's Press Association reported.

The bombers intended to simultaneously destroy at least seven planes carrying over 200 passengers in August 2006 using explosives hidden in soft drink bottles, prosecutors said.

Home Secretary Alan Johnson hailed the verdicts, saying: "I am pleased that the jury has recognized that there was a plot to bomb transatlantic flights and that three people have been convicted of that plot."

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India-Pakistan
Targets of Indo-Israeli secret diplomacy
2008-08-17
By Sajjad Shaukat

Both India and Israel which had openly jumped on Bush's anti-terrorism enterprise after the September 11, are acting upon a secret diplomacy, targeting Pakistan and China in particular and other regional countries in general. In this context, proper media coverage was not given to the Indo-Israeli secret diplomacy, which could be assessed from the interview of Israel's ambassador to India, Mark Sofer published in the Indian weekly Outlook on February 18, 2008. Regarding India's defence arrangements with Israel, Sofer had surprisingly disclosed "We do have a defence relationship with India, which is no secret. On the other hand, what is secret is the defence relationship". And "with all due respect, the secret part will remain a secret." On being asked whether he foresaw joint exercises, Sofer replied, "Certain issues need to remain under wraps for whatever reason."

Indo-Israeli nexus remained under wraps till 2003, when Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon visited India to officially reveal it. In this respect, Indian 'The Tribune' wrote on September 10, 2003, "India and Israel took giant leaps forward in bolstering the existing strategic ties and forging new ones" and Tel Aviv has "agreed to share its expertise with India various fields as anti-fidayeen operations, surveillance satellites, intelligence sharing and space exploration." Next day, 'Indian Express', disclosed, "From anti-missile systems to hi-tech radars, from sky drones to night-vision equipment, Indo-Israeli defense cooperation has known no bounds in recent times". On September 5, 2003 American Wall Street Journal pointed out, "The U.S. finally gave its approval to Israel's delivery of Phalcon Airborne Warning & Controlling Systems (AWACS) to India"-this "sale might affect the conventional weapons balance between India and Pakistan".

Before it, Jerusalem Post had also indicated about Israeli sale of the Arrow-II anti-ballistic missile defense system to India, revealing that "the U.S. was a collaborator in the project". The Post further elaborated that "Israel could be acquiring an element of strategic depth by setting up logistical bases in the Indian Ocean for its navy." In fact, links between India and Israel were started in the early years of the former Prime Minister Indra Gandhi when she asked the chief of RAW Rameshwar Nath Kao to establish a clandestine liaison with Mossad to monitor military relationship between Pakistan, China and North Korea.

During the era of Zia-ul-Haq, a RAW-Mossad joint plot was detected to attack Pakistan's nuclear plant at Kahuta. The matter is not confined to purchasing of military equipments only, Indo-Israeli overt and covert links are part of a dangerous strategic game in Asia. In this connection, the then Israeli premier, Benjamin Netanyahu had already made it clear in July 1997 saying, "Our ties with India don't have any limitations-as long as India and Israel are friendly, it is a strategic gain". There are other reasons behind Indo-Israeli secret diplomacy.

Fast growing economic power of China coupled with her rising strategic relationship with the Third World has been misperceived by the Americans and Indians. Owing to this jealousy, tactical support of Washington to New Delhi, indirect military aid through Israel, the US-India nuclear deal-all are part of American desire to make India a major power to counterbalance China in Asia as both of them see China a "future strategic competitor". As regards Indian new military build up, on May 31 this year, after 43 years, New Delhi re-opened its Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) airbase in northern Ladakh, which overlooks the strategic Karakoram Pass and is only 8 km south of the Chinese border-Aksai Chin area. India has also erected more than 10 new helipads and roads between the Sino-Indian border.

It is of particular attention that in May 1998, when India detonated five nuclear tests, the then Defense Minister George Fernandes had declared publicly that "China is India's potential threat No. 1." India which successfully tested missile, Agni-III in May 2007, has been extending its range to target all the big cities of China. On the other side, a 'nuclearized' Pakistan, depending upon minimum deterrence, having close ties with Beijing is another major target of the Indo-Israeli secret diplomacy. However, Beijing and Islamabad cannot neglect their common defence when their adversaries are following a covert strategy.

Formation of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), voicing for a multi-polar system in the world might be cited as an example. Under the new proposed deal with Pakistan, China will be able to use the Karakoram Highway and ports of Gwadar and Karachi for transporting its goods to the Middle East and Africa. It is notable that on April 18, 2008, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi openly claimed that "some external forces were trying to weaken Pak-China strategic ties by creating misunderstandings". On August 8, 2007 Major Tanvir Hussain Syed (R), the former parliamentary secretary for defence accused the American CIA of killing Chinese nationals in Pakistan to harm the cordial relations between Islamabad and Beijing.

It is mentionable that in the recent past, when anti-government violent protests by Buddhist monks erupted in Tibet's capital, Lhasa including nearby provinces, New Delhi, while acting upon a secret diplomacy backed the same, though outwardly denied. New Delhi shows that despite Sino-Indian border dispute, she does not favour an independence of Tibet and avoids any propaganda against Beijing. But Indian stand was indirectly expressed by its leaders and media. For example, the former foreign minister Yashwant Sinha said, "We want good relations with China, but if we reach a point of conflict over Tibet, we should be prepared for that eventuality."

Indian media had left no stone unturned in exaggerating the casualties by manipulating China's crackdown against the militants of Tibet, which was essential to restore law and order. Nevertheless, it is because of the strategic developments in Asia that the issue of Tibet and Dalai Lama is being manipulated by the anti-China states. The state-run China Daily, on July 27, 2006, denounced the Lama as a "splittist" and pointed out that he has "collaborated with the Indian military and American CIA to organise Indian Tibetan special border troops to fight their way back into Tibet". As regards Islamabad, US, India, Afghanistan and Israel are in collusion as part of a plot to 'destabilize' Pakistan for their common strategic interests.

It was due to new subversive acts of the militants in Balochistan and the tribal areas, especially Swat, backed by CIA, RAW, Khad and Mossad that on June 29, 2008, Prime Minister Gilani stated that there were "several enemies of the country" and "foreign hands were also involved in the acts of terrorism". On August 4, President Musharraf also said that India was behind the unrest in Balochistan, providing arms and ammunition to those involved in violence in the province. Recently, Islamabad indicated evidence that there are a number of Indian training camps in Afghanistan from where saboteurs are being sent to these areas to commit terrorist activities. During the recent trip of Prime Minister Gilani to the US, American media propagated ties between Pakistan's intelligence service, ISI and militants in the tribal regions, blaming it for the bombing of Indian embassy in Kabul on July 7.

These false allegations were also repeated by Kabul and New Delhi. The main aim behind was to tarnish the image of ISI to conceal the clandestine activities of CIA, RAW, Mossad and Khad which have been creating unrest in Pakistan. The fact of the matter is that by availing the ongoing international phenomena of terrorism, Jewish-Hindu lobbies are collectively working in America and other European countries to exploit the double standards of the west in relation to terrorism and human rights vis-à-vis Pakistan and China.

Israel and India are equating the 'war of independence' in Kashmir and Palestine with terrorism. They also accuse Iran, Syria and Pakistan of sponsoring cross-border terrorism in the related regions of South Asia and the Middle East. If India considers Pakistan as her enemy number one, Israel takes Iran in the same sense especially due to its nuclear programme which is also negated by the US. Tel Aviv is also against Pakistan as it is the only nuclear Islamic country. However, these similarities of interest have brought the two countries to follow a common secret diplomacy with the tactical support of Washington, targeting particularly Pakistan and China including other states like Nepal, North Korea, Bangladesh, Iran, Syria etc.
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Britain
3 cop plea in aircraft bomb plot
2008-07-14
LONDON: Three men accused of plotting to bring down trans-Atlantic passenger jets with liquid explosives pleaded guilty to planning to set off bombs but maintain they did not seek to destroy airliners, prosecutors said Monday. Abdulla Ahmed Ali, 27, Assad Sarwar, 28, Tanvir Hussain, 27, and five co-defendants are charged with a plot to kill hundreds of passengers at the height of the summer vacation season by detonating explosives concealed in soft-drink bottles on flights over the Atlantic Ocean or U.S. cities. The unraveling of the alleged plot led to tough new restrictions on the amount of liquids and gels passengers can take in their carry-on bags.

Prosecutors said Ali, Sarwar and Hussain had admitted to a charge of conspiring to set off explosions but say that they are innocent of the more serious charge of conspiracy to murder. The eight men are still being tried on the murder conspiracy charge, which carries a maximum life sentence.

Ali and Sarwar have told the court they wanted to set off explosions as a publicity stunt to promote an anti-Western documentary. Ali said he hoped a small, nonfatal, bombing -- at Britain's Houses of Parliament, at an oil refinery, or at an airport -- would jolt Londoners and draw attention to his movie, which would be released online.
Yeah, regular Spielbergs they were I'll bet..
Ali, Sarwar, Hussain and co-defendants Ibrahim Savant, 27, and Umar Islam, 30, have also admitted to "conspiring to cause a public nuisance" by publishing alleged martyrdom videos, the prosecution said.

The Crown Prosecution Service did not say when the guilty pleas were entered or what sentences the lesser charges carry. Defense attorneys did not address the jury Monday. The eight men are accused of stockpiling enough hydrogen peroxide to create 20 liquid bombs, although they did not create any viable explosives. "We did not want to kill or injure anyone," Ali testified last month.
Nah. We're good boys...
Prosecutor Peter Wright scoffed at that idea Monday, calling the defendants' accounts "inherently improbable." He said that the attacks were imminent when the men were arrested in August 2006 in raids in and around London. The defendants had even prepared the martyrdom videos to be shown after the airline bombings.
Kinda hard to 'splain that one away, innit?
Performance art ...
The men were "almost ready to go," Wright told Woolwich Crown Court in London. "This was no propaganda video, no documentary, no exercise or stunt -- this was for real," he said. "Human beings ready, able and willing to commit carnage for the sake of Islam." He accused the defendants of wanting "to murder as many civilian passengers as possible upon as many civilian aircraft as possible. "Each was prepared to kill and to do so on a wholly indiscriminate basis, irrespective of age, belief, sex and to do so without the slightest blink of an eye," Wright said.

The attack "was intended to be an act of terrorism to not only alter aviation history but also to strike a blow on behalf of radicalized Islamists the world over," he said. In his opening statement in April, Wright said officers found a computer memory stick in Ali's pocket with details of flights from London's Heathrow Airport to Chicago, New York, Boston, Denver, Miami and Montreal. He said that there did not appear to be any interest in return flights.
There usually isn't...
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Britain
Suspect was in 'al-Qaeda' video
2008-06-18
A man accused of being part of a plot to blow up passenger planes has told a court how he agreed to appear in an 'al Qaeda-style militant' video. But Tanvir Hussain, 27, denied that the footage he recorded alongside five of his co-defendants in July 2006 was part of a set of martyrdom films.
"No, no, certainly not!"
Eight men deny conspiring to murder and endanger aircraft leaving the UK. Their arrests in August 2006 led to a ban on passengers carrying most liquids on board aircraft.

Prosecutors allege the men planned to make hydrogen peroxide bombs disguised as soft drinks to detonate in mid-air on at least seven planes flying out of London's Heathrow airport.

Mr Hussain told the jury at Woolwich Crown Court that the videos were meant to be included in a documentary protesting against western foreign policy. The messages would be interspersed with 'shocking images of people dying in Afghanistan, Iraq and Palestine', he said.

He said he was 'taken aback' when his friend and co-defendant Abdulla Ahmed Ali, 27, revealed plans to blow up a device in a public place as the two men spoke at his flat in April 2006. Mr Hussain said: 'He said to me: 'It ain't going to be nothing big, just a loud bang to cause panic and alarm.''

Michel Massih QC, for the defence, queried whether he had asked Mr Ali if he intended to kill anyone. Mr Hussain replied: 'I didn't ask him. I know Ahmed wouldn't do nothing like that.'

Mr Sarwar and Mr Ali's co-defendants are Tanvir Hussain, 27, of Leyton, east London, Waheed Zaman, 24, and Arafat Waheed Khan, 27, both of Walthamstow, east London. Also charged are Mohammed Gulzar, 26, of Barking, east London, Ibrahim Savant, 27, of Stoke Newington, north London, and Umar Islam, 30, of Plaistow, east London. All eight deny two joint charges of conspiring to murder and to endanger aircraft.
"Lies! All lies!"
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Britain
U.K. Terrorist Suspect Says He Was Filmmaker, Not Plane Bomber
2008-06-02
A man charged with being part of a terrorist plot to blow up seven transatlantic airliners denied that he planned to harm anyone, telling a London court that he and friends were making a documentary.
Oh. Well. That makes it allright then ...
Ahmed Ali, 27, testified that after spending time as an aid worker in refugee camps in Pakistan witnessing ``appalling'' conditions, he decided to make a movie to change public opinion about U.K. foreign policy. The group also planned to set off a small explosive device by the Houses of Parliament that would generate publicity for the film.

``Something like that would be sensational -- it would create mass media attention,'' Ali told a jury in London today. ``Never did we intend or think about murdering anybody.''
Sure, after all, small explosive devices have never killed anyone ...
Ali is one of eight men accused by prosecutors of planning ``almost unprecedented carnage,'' by smuggling liquid explosives onto flights for destinations in Canada and the U.S. The investigation following the arrests prompted bans on passengers bringing more than small amounts of liquids and gels onto planes.

The men on trial -- Ali, Assad Sarwar, Tanvir Hussain, Mohammed Gulzar, Ibrahim Savant, Arafat Khan, Waheed Zaman, and Umar Islam -- have denied wrongdoing. They are all in their 20s. This is the first day of their defense.

In April, when the government opened its case, prosecutor Peter Wright said the group was almost ready to mount an attack when they were arrested in August 2006. Had the group succeeded its plot would have resulted in an unprecedented ``civilian death toll for an act of terrorism,'' he said.

The group planned to disguise liquid explosives in soft-drink cartons and had identified daily flights from London to Montreal, Toronto, San Francisco, Washington, New York, and two to Chicago, prosecutors claim. The discovery of the plot caused temporary chaos at airports, with more than 2,380 flights from London canceled in the week after the men's arrest.

Prosecutors claim that a computer memory stick owned by Ali contained detailed timetables for the targeted flights. He is the first of the group to testify.

Another publicity stunt for the documentary, which would be posted on YouTube, was to film a sequence in which he and his friends would ``make demands in the style of al-Qaeda militants,'' Ali testified.
Just a scene in the movie, of course ...
Earlier today, Ali spoke of his experiences as an aid worker in Pakistan in 2003, working in refugee camps. Children died every day and many of the refugees, most of whom were Afghans, were ``maimed, with limbs blown off,'' said Ali, a graduate of City University in London.
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