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Home Front: WoT
Abu Hamza Aide Given 20 Years on U.S. Terror Charges
2015-10-18
[AnNahar] A Briton convicted over an attempt to set up a jihad training camp in the U.S. on orders from hate preacher Abu Hamza was sentenced to 20 years in prison Friday in New York.

Haroon Aswat, who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, cut a despondent figure in the Manhattan federal court, dressed in a faded prison shirt and wearing his long dark hair plaited in braids.

The 41-year-old has already spent 11 years in jug meaning that he could qualify for early release in six years. His lawyer said he would apply for Aswat to serve out his sentence in Britannia.

First tossed in the calaboose
Yez got nuttin' on me, coppers! Nuttin'!
in Zambia in 2005, Aswat was extradited last year to the United States where he pleaded guilty in March to one count of providing material support to Al-Qaeda and one count of conspiring to support the terror group.

In a brief statement, Aswat apologized for breaking U.S. law and causing "distress" to friends and family, and said he looked forward to finding a wife, and settling down.

He said he opposed violence against innocent people and recited a prayer learned in childhood, opening his statement in Arabic in the name of God and closing with a simple "amen."

In 1999-2000, Aswat spent about two months in Seattle and Bly, Oregon at the behest of the radical London holy man Abu Hamza as part of a plot to set up a training camp for recruits wanting to fight in Afghanistan.

Following his return to London, he traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistain in mid-2001 in order to attend a training camp.

Prosecutors depicted Aswat as a man "at the right-hand of Abu Hamza" with a thirst for violent jihad who kept "a host of disturbing literature" on his computer.

The 41-year-old has already spent 11 years in jug meaning that he could qualify for early release in six years.
Aswat came to the United States "at the direction of one of the world's most dangerous terrorist leaders" and could pose a danger when he is released, prosecutors argued on Friday.

Aswat was previously held at Broadmoor, a high-security British psychiatric hospital.

His lawyer Peter Quijano told the court his client never tried to join Al-Qaeda, describing him as a "child-like" individual who embraced a "hippy lifestyle" and "self-medicated" with marijuana.

After the 9/11 attacks and the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan, Aswat fled to South Africa, where he had family, and embarked on a life as an itinerant salesman of pirated CDs of Islamic chants and prayer, said the defense lawyer.

Quijano told news hounds he would request his client's transfer to Britannia, where Aswat's parents are based.

U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest said it was "of the greatest importance" that he receive specialist psychiatric care and that the court would support him serving out his sentence in Britannia.

The defense called for Aswat's immediate release given that he has already spent a quarter of his life in prison.

Quijano said Aswat was held at least three times in isolation in the United States, despite promises to the contrary, including one five-day period in which he did not receive medication.

Aswat's lawyer told the court his client never aligned himself with violence but had "felt sorry" for the one-armed Abu Hamza, becoming his assistant "doing day-to-day chores."

Quijano called the Bly plot "pathetic and laughable" and said all his client had done was teach Islam, Arabic and the Koran.

"What did he do there? It was minimal," he said.

American government officials say Aswat was included on a list of people associated with Al-Qaeda recovered from a safe house used by 9/11 plotter Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in Pakistain.

Forrest sentenced Abu Hamza to life behind bars in January for the fatal kidnapping of Western tourists in Yemen
...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of. Except for a tiny handfull of Jews everthing there is very Islamic...
and on a slew of terror charges, calling him "evil" and his crimes "barbaric."
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Home Front: WoT
Mentally ill British man pleads guilty to US terrorism charges
2015-03-31
[Ynet] A mentally ill British man pleaded guilty on Monday to US terrorism charges and conspiring with radical London holy man Abu Hamza al-Masri to set up a jihadist training camp in Oregon in 1999.

Haroon Aswat, 40, entered his plea in Manhattan federal court as part of an agreement with government prosecutors. Defense lawyer Peter Quijano had disclosed the outline of the deal in the court earlier this month, saying it would resolve the case ahead of a June 1 trial date. Under questioning from US District Judge Katherine Forrest before pleading guilty, the soft-spoken Aswat said he had suffered from symptoms of schizophrenia for the last 20 years and was currently being treated for the disorder. He was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia in 2008 while being held at a high-security psychiatric hospital in England, according to court documents.
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Europe
ECHR bars extradition British terrorist suspect to US
2013-04-16
CASE OF ASWAT v. THE UNITED KINGDOM
That's Mr Haroon Aswat,
...the British national suspected of links to the July 7 London terror bombings and also wanted by US authorities over attempts to set up a terrorist training camp in Bly, Oregon...
according to the text.
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Home Front: WoT
Terrorist plot unravels at rural Oregon ranch
2009-10-17
Oussama Kassir, a self-proclaimed al-Qaida tough guy, flew into a rage after his late-night arrival at a remote Oregon ranch. The barren rangeland, suggestive of Afghanistan, was to become an Islamic fighter training base.

Kassir expected to be welcomed by Muslim recruits, eager to learn the ways of war. Instead, he got an Islamic leader from Seattle, a mentally impaired 18-year-old and two women more interested in canning jars than jihad. Kassir expected access to a weapons armory. He got one pistol and a .22-caliber rifle.

The events that led to the effort 10 years ago to establish a jihad camp outside Bly have been well-chronicled. But testimony and exhibits from Kassir's trial in New York provide the fullest account to date of what went on behind the gates of the Dog Cry Ranch. What emerges from the trial record is an almost comic account of passwords, night patrols and target practice. Jihad, it seems, couldn't take root alongside the sagebrush and weeds that greeted Kassir.

Kassir recently was sentenced to life in prison for his effort, and his two partners in the enterprise are awaiting extradition to the U.S.
Kassir recently was sentenced to life in prison for his effort, and his two partners in the enterprise are awaiting extradition to the U.S.

The whole set up was in fact a hustle by a petty crook from Seattle named James Ujaama. Ujaama envisioned the Oregon camp as an Islamic time share, selling visits to foreign Muslims. Twice he lured groups from his Seattle mosque for weekend visits to the ranch. They thought they were going on a bit of a Western adventure -- riding, shooting and chasing cows.

In late 1999, Ujaama pitched a more grave version to a London imam, Abu Hamza al-Masri. The hook-handed preacher was known for fiery oratory, lashing the West while secretly arranging entree for Muslims to militant camps in Afghanistan. Ujaama promised al-Masri a safe haven, recruits and weapons to transform the desert ranch into a Muslim military training camp.

Al-Masri bought the pitch, and Kassir soon found himself on a trans-Atlantic flight to the U.S. He would later boast that he had trained in al-Qaida camps in Afghanistan. He brought along a partner, Haroon Aswat, supposedly an al-Qaida trainer himself. Aswat later would spend time in an al-Qaida safe house in Pakistan, his visit recorded in a ledger bearing the fingerprints of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed -- the mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

For the Oregon trip, the wiry Aswat packed homemade training CDs with graphic instructions on how to make bombs and poisons. One manual warned that making poison was "more dangerous than making explosives. Always use good protective clothing. I know too many mujahedeen whose lungs and bodies are messed up due to the lack of quality protection equipment."

Kassir brought with him a wad of British currency, but this was a low-budget affair. To save money, the trainers endured a two-day ride across the U.S. on a Greyhound bus to reach Seattle and Ujaama.

In early December 1999, they drove south to Bly, arriving at the Dog Cry Ranch about midnight. They were welcomed by Semi Osman, a mechanic and part-time imam from Seattle. He had recently moved into a ramshackle mobile home on the ranch with his wife, their daughter, and his wife's teenage brother. The only other person on the ranch was the Islamic wife of the sheep rancher who owned the place.

Kassir looked around the scruffy compound of two mobile homes and a few outbuildings. In the kitchen of one of the mobile homes, Kassir turned on Ujaama. Over and over, he demanded of Ujaama: Where are the recruits? Where are the recruits? Ujaama and Osman said the would-be jihadists had families and jobs in Seattle and couldn't move down. Where, then, are the guns, Kassir demanded. The men from Seattle said they had a couple and would get more.

Kassir raged on, asking about housing for their beloved imam once he arrived from London. "Where are you going to put this man?" Kassir hissed. By morning, Ujaama was gone and so was his idea of a Muslim retreat.
Kassir later confided to one of the women at the ranch that he intended to kill Ujaama on the spot and bury him in the woods.
Kassir later confided to one of the women at the ranch that he intended to kill Ujaama on the spot and bury him in the woods. He was talked out of it and warned that Ujaama's wife surely would come looking for him.

Kassir wasn't ready to give up on the idea of a training camp. He initiated night patrols, leading Aswat, the Seattle imam, and the mentally impaired teenager on all-night forays. They dressed in black, checked fence lines, looking for signs of intruders. Kassir explained they were practicing reconnaissance. He blackened his eyes with coal, explaining that made the whites stand out in a more menacing way in battle. Using the guns they had, they practiced shooting in an advancing line, from a crouch and from sniperlike positions on the hills. They bought a shotgun for their tiny arsenal, but Kassir took it for himself. From then on, he carried it over his shoulder wherever he went on the ranch.

Kassir taught the men to throw knives and claimed he got his curved Gurkha knife in fighting overseas. One day, they gathered at the horse corrals for Kassir to teach them how to kill with a knife. The teenager was instructed to drop to his knees to serve as sort of a practice dummy. Kassir asked the teen whether he could kill a man. The boy replied that he could because he had killed sheep. "Killing a man is not like killing a sheep," Kassir said.

Al-Masri called the ranch from London one day to check on progress. The call alarmed Osman. "You can't have him call here, because he has heat on him," Osman told the others. Too late.
Al-Masri called the ranch from London one day to check on progress. The call alarmed Osman. "You can't have him call here, because he has heat on him," Osman told the others. Too late. British and U.S. authorities had been tracking developments at the ranch almost from the start.

Aside from such lapses, Kassir did impose security measures. He instructed Hyat Hakimah, the ranch owner's wife, to use a password before leaving her mobile home. Hakimah was growing uneasy with developments. She had expected to run a sort of Home Extension Service for Muslims at her place. "They were, you know, training for war," she later explained. She and her husband were never implicated in any wrongdoing. "I was just wanting, you know, people to be able to raise their own vegetables and preserve them and eat more healthy," she said.

Kassir suggested that she send the Arab horses she was raising overseas to Afghanistan. She saw the poison-making manual and its recommendation to test poisons on horses. "That was a needless thing," Hakimah later testified. She soon abandoned the ranch to the visitors, and a month later they were gone too.

Kassir and Aswat took refuge in a Seattle mosque and tried taking the training to the Muslims who hadn't wanted to move to Bly. After a few classes, the men from London gave up and packed their bags for home. Kassir explained his exasperation to Osman. "I've been trying to train these brothers," Kassir said. "They're not taking it seriously."
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Home Front: WoT
Suspect Charged With Plotting Terror Camp
2005-12-14
A Lebanese-born Swede has been charged in a plot to set up a terrorist training camp in Oregon, prosecutors said. A criminal complaint charging Oussama Kassir with conspiring to provide material support to terrorists was unsealed Tuesday in U.S. District Court.

The case relates to an indictment in Manhattan already charging Mustafa Kamel Mustafa and Haroon Aswat. Aswat and Mustafa, the radical London cleric also known as Abu Hamza al-Masri, are being detained in England while awaiting extradition to the United States. Kassir, 39, was arrested Sunday in the Czech Republic after a warrant was filed with Interpol, U.S. Attorney Michael J. Garcia said Tuesday. He remains detained in Prague as the United States pursues his extradition.

The complaint alleges that Kassir and others conspired to establish a training camp for holy war, or jihad, in Bly, Ore. According to the complaint, Kassir and others wanted to set up the camp to teach military-style methods so a community of Muslims could move to Afghanistan to fight or receive further training there. Authorities in Oregon have said the camp never materialized beyond a dozen people taking target practice and was abandoned for unknown reasons.

The complaint refers to a letter faxed from one alleged conspirator to another saying that the Bly property was in a "pro-militia and firearms state" that "looks just like Afghanistan" and that the group was "stockpiling weapons and ammunition." The complaint said that on Nov. 26, 1999, Kassir and another conspirator traveled from London to New York and then to Seattle and Bly to help with the training camp. Blye is an unincorporated town of a few hundred residents, 50 miles east of Klamath Falls.

Prosecutors said Kassir complained to a witness at Bly that there were only a few men available to train at the camp and that he was not going to waste his time with such a small number of men. Kassir also allegedly complained that the facilities and supplies were inadequate. The government also said that a witness saw Kassir in possession of a compact disc with information about improvising poisons.

Kassir was detained Sunday at Prague's Ruzyne international airport and had been flying from Stockholm to Beirut, Prague police said. "Supporters of terrorism must know that they should not feel safe in trying to hide overseas," Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher said in a statement. "We will work to bring these individuals to justice, however long it takes."

Kassir was born in Lebanon and moved to Sweden in 1984, becoming a Swedish citizen in 1989. He spent several months in prison in 1998 for assaulting a police officer and drug possession. A Swedish court jailed Kassir for 10 months two years ago for illegal weapons possession.

Aswat was arrested in Zambia in July in connection with the deadly July 7 London subway bombings.

Mustafa has previously denied any involvement in violence and says he is only a spokesman for political causes. Mustafa's lawyers have argued that he will not receive a fair hearing in the United States because President Bush has prejudiced any trial by publicly calling him a terrorism supporter. They also say some American evidence against the preacher may have been obtained from tortured witnesses. Mustafa has called the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks a Jewish plot and the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq a war on Islam. In 2003, the Charity Commission barred al-Masri from preaching at his London mosque, which has been linked to several terrorist suspects.
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Britain
Family of suspect fear torture (Barf Alert)
2005-07-30
THE family of Zambian-held London bombings suspect Haroon Aswat said overnight they feared he may be extradited to face torture in the United States, and criticised Britain's handling of the situation.
The British national is suspected of links to the July 7 London terror bombings and is also wanted by US authorities over alleged attempts to set up a terrorist training camp in Bly, Oregon.

"We are extremely concerned, distressed and disappointed by the attitude of the British government and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in not providing consular access to Haroon," the man's family said in a statement.

British officials have refused to comment on reports that Aswat is the suspected mastermind behind the July 7 blasts that killed 56 people, including four suicide bombers, in three blasts on the London subway and one on a bus.

Aswat, 31, who hails from West Yorkshire in northern England, was detained on July 20 and is being held in the Zambian capital Lusaka, police confirmed Saturday. Britain was understood to be seeking access to Aswat.

His parents, originally from India but who now live in Batley in West Yorkshire, the county home to three of July 7 suicide bombers, blasted the failure of British authorities to contact him.

"It is very worrying that after more than 10 days the British government is still unable to verify that the British citizen detained is actually Haroon," they said.

"Our son, albeit estranged for many years, is surely entitled to the presumption of innocence, as any other British citizen.

The family noted press reports that unnamed British officials are in discussions with the US government over extradition of Aswat. "Yet our government and the FCO is dilly dallying and does not have the decency to confirm Haroon's detention."

"We wonder whether the government's attitude would have been any different if it was a white, non-Muslim citizen detained in a foreign country?" they said.
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Home Front: WoT
Aswat tried to set up al-Qaeda camp in the US
2005-07-25
Haroon Rashid Aswat, the man accused of masterminding the London suicide bombings is also being hunted by the FBI, who say he tried to set up an Al-Qaeda training camp in America.
The 30-year-old, whose parents hailed from Gujarat, was named last week as the 'Mr Big' who authorities believe was behind the London attacks. Many newspapers even reported he had been arrested in Pakistan.

The Mail on Sunday quoted FBI sources saying they suspected Aswat to be the "main man" behind the July 7 attacks, although highly placed British security sources dismissed his involvement.

Aswat, according to the report, was a follower of a radical Islamic cleric in London, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

According to FBI sources, Aswat first came to the attention of the Americans in 1999 when he arrived in Seattle with another man, Oussama Kassir, a Swede of Lebanese descent who once bragged about being Osama bin Laden's 'hit man'.

The FBI claimed that the pair met James Ujaama, 36, who proposed an Afghanistan-style training camp near the sleepy town of Bly, Oregon, with a population of 500.

The dilapidated 160-acre ranch earmarked as the jihad training site was owned by a relative of Semi Osman, a man who worshipped in the same Seattle mosque as Ujaama.

But the plan quickly descended into farce. According to sources familiar with the case, Aswat was frustrated when, on arriving at the Dog Cry Ranch, he found that Ujaama did not have a key to open the locked gate.

The men then discovered they had to share a dilapidated trailer with no bathroom or running water. There was no food and they were forced to hunt quail and rabbits to eat. Things went from bad to worse when Osman was driving with Aswat near the ranch one morning and they were stopped by police for jumping a red light.

Police officer Morrie Smith told The Mail on Sunday: "It was just a last-minute traffic stop before my shift ended. The men in the car were wearing long, black trench-coats with camouflage trousers underneath. They were of ethnic origin and were sweating profusely. The driver was nervous.

"The man in the front passenger seat, who I now believe was Aswat, looked Indian and had a beard. He was clutching a briefcase and he appeared very protective of it. Every time I looked at him, he pulled it closer to his chest. It threw me because you don't get sights like that on the roads here in Bly.

"I booked the driver for not having a licence and then allowed the car to go. I could have arrested them, but did not as I had a gut feeling there was something very strange and dangerous about these men. It was a traffic stop which I now realize could have gone very bad indeed."

The FBI said Aswat and Kassir left Oregon in disgust and returned to Britain dismissive of the Bly training camp proposal.

Ujaama was indicted by federal authorities in Seattle in 2002 for offering support to the Taliban. Because he cooperated with FBI, Ujaama was sentenced to just 24 months in jail. He is believed to have helped American officials identify a photograph of Haroon Aswat taken in London.

Last night, senior Whitehall security sources said Aswat was not wanted in connection with the current terrorist attacks.
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