Abu Doha | Abu Doha | al-Qaeda | Arrested | 20030112 |
Britain | |
Al Qaeda dad wins right to stay in UK because his kids are 'settled' | |
2010-05-09 | |
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Suspect T - who arrived here on a false passport and has also admitted lying to the security services and committing fraud - has claimed it's not safe for him to go back to Algeria. Trained in Afghanistan to handle Kalashnikovs and explosives, the dad-of-four tried to get into France and Germany in 1993 and 1997. THEY kicked him out. But the aces in his pack when it comes to the UK have proved to be his children born after he sneaked into the country in 2001. Allowing his THIRD appeal since the Home Office ruled him a threat to national security in 2005, the Special Immigration Appeals Commission said he could stay - because his kids like it here. Mr Justice Mitting insisted that European Human Rights laws, and guidance titled Every Child Matters means a "fine balance must be struck" between the potential risk to the UK population and the interests of T's family. The judge even considered evidence from a primary school teacher that the terror suspect's eldest child is "happy" and from T's solicitor who claimed the eight-year-old has "an ambition to be a doctor." The judge also predicted their 39-year-old father - who now lives in Birmingham and has been on bail since 2005 - will be able to appeal against deportation repeatedly because he is at the back of a queue of eight other Algerians whose cases have to be decided. The judgment comes despite the 39-year-old's links with extremist al Qaeda fighters, and the fact he attended the Khalden terror training camp in Afghanistan where airliner shoe bombers Richard Reid and Saajid Badat were indoctrinated. He later lodged in London with active terror group member Mustafa Melki and associated with Abu Doha, who leads an organisation which backed a bid to bomb LA airport in 1999 and a plan to attack Strasbourg. T was originally detained as part of a Government attempt to deport ten suspected extremists, who launched a series of appeals. All were backed by legal aid and, throughout his appeals, his accommodation and living costs have been taxpayer- funded through benefits and housing allowances. He has also been living under strict police surveillance, estimated to cost £250,000-a-year. So the bill runs into millions. | |
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Home Front: WoT | ||||
Would-be LAX bomber is resentenced to 22 years | ||||
2008-12-05 | ||||
U.S. District Judge John Coughenour rejected the government's warning that Ressam, who in 1999 was stopped coming off a ferry from Canada with a carload of explosives, had reverted to Al Qaeda sympathies and would represent a danger if he were ever released. Noting that the case comes "as our nation prepares for a new chapter," Coughenour said Ressam had provided "an unprecedented view of the inner workings [of Al Qaeda] that almost without question prevented . . . future attacks." The substantial help that the Algerian provided to U.S. officials before his change of heart -- coupled with the relatively shorter sentences handed out in other terrorism cases -- merited no harsher a penalty than the 22-year sentence first imposed in 2005, the judge said.
Government lawyers started out the day seeking a 45-year sentence. But as Ressam accused investigators of pressuring him through mental duress into providing unreliable information against Al Qaeda suspects, prosecutors upped the ante to demand life in prison. Ressam, who was representing himself, did not object. "Sentence me to life in prison, or anything you wish," he told the judge. "I will have no objection to your sentence." The Ressam case represents a stunning reversal for federal prosecutors who once had relied on the 41-year-old militant for help in a variety of high-level terrorism cases -- some of which were halted in their tracks when he stopped talking in 2003. Ressam has recanted his testimony in at least three cases, one involving his alleged accomplice in the Los Angeles bombing plot, Mokhtar Haouari. The Montreal shopkeeper was sentenced to 24 years in prison in 2001 for conspiring to provide material support by giving Ressam money and a fake Canadian driver's license. On Wednesday, Ressam told the court he had been pressured into providing testimony in two other high-profile cases -- one involving Abu Doha, identified by U.S. authorities as one of Europe's highest-ranking Al Qaeda figures, and Samir Ait Mohamed, who allegedly helped Ressam in the Los Angeles bombing conspiracy. "The government attorney and the investigator . . . interpret[ed] some of my statements to suit their interest, and statements . . . were put in my mouth. I said yes because of the extreme mental exhaustion I was going through," Ressam said Wednesday. "I retract all the statements I made in the past and do not want my word counted in the trial. . . . I did not know what I was saying."
"Our government was put in a horrible situation," said Mark Bartlett, first assistant U.S. attorney in Seattle. "We had gone to two of our closest allies, Great Britain and Canada, and said . . . arrest these people, keep them in custody, and we promise we will bring them to the United States. . . . We will hold them accountable. And then we have to go back and say we are unable to try them." Ressam's assertions about the Haouari case in court Wednesday can now be used by the shopkeeper's lawyers to demand a new trial, Bartlett said. "Ressam has provided no indication that he has repudiated the goals of terrorists to inflict harm on the United States. His decision to end cooperation raises the specter that he continues to pose a real and serious threat to the United States," Bartlett wrote in his sentencing memorandum. Jeffrey Sullivan, the U.S. attorney in Seattle, said after Wednesday's court session that he would seek permission to appeal Ressam's sentence. He argued that Ressam stopped cooperating not because of a mental breakdown, but because he was unhappy with the 22 years he originally had received. "He told the court today in front of the judge, 'I'm a terrorist, I'm trained as a terrorist, I'm going to do it again when I get out. . . . That's what I heard him say," Sullivan said. "He deserves to stay in jail until he dies." Tom Hillier, the federal public defender who represented Ressam at trial, said his client received much harsher treatment once he was transferred to New York to help with higher-profile terrorism cases. "There were factors -- in the sense of lengthy, repetitive, demanding, unrelenting interrogations of somebody who's helping, you know? And without a lot of concern for his frame of mind during all of that," Hillier said.
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Britain |
Terrorist 'linked to Osama bin Laden' released on bail |
2008-07-03 |
His name is suppressed, but it is our old friend Abu Doha (a.k.a. "The Doctor," Rachid, Amar Makhlolif, and Didier Ajuelo) |
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Britain |
Britain: Terror suspects claim detention caused mental harm |
2008-05-21 |
![]() On Wednesday the court will hold a public hearing in Strasbourg to investigate the claims in a case brought against the British government. The applicants, none of whom have British nationality, were allegedly involved in extreme Islamist terrorist groups with links to al-Qaeda, the court said in a statement. Six of the applicants are Algerian, and the others are French, Jordanian, Moroccan and Tunisian. Another was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan, and is stateless. All eleven were detained after al-Qaeda's 11 September, 2001 attacks in the US. They were imprisoned at various times between December 2001 and October 2003 and initially held at Belmarsh Prison in London under Britain's 2001 Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act. All the men were allegedly involved in Islamist terrorist groups with links to al-Qaeda such as the Salafite Group for Prayer and Combat (GSPC) formed in Algeria in 1998, the Tunisia Fighting Group. The men are also said to be linked to a group of Algerian terrorists centred around al-Qaeda and GSPC member Abu Doha, known for his senior role in terror training camps in Afghanistan. He was also linked to a Frankfurt-based cell accused of plotting to bomb the Strasbourg Christmas market in December, 1995. The eleven are suspected of supplying false documents, purchasing IT equipment and helping young British Muslims travel from the UK to train for Jihad (holy war) in Afghanistan. Three of the men were subsequently transferred to Broadmoor secure mental hospital following a deterioration in their mental health, including a suicide attempt. Another was released on bail in April 2004 under conditions equivalent to house arrest, owing to serious concerns over his mental health. A visit by Europe's top human rights watchdog, The Council of Europe's Committee for the Prevention of Torture, criticised the applicants' conditions of detention in Belmarsh Prison and Broadmoor Hospital and reported allegations of ill-treatment by staff. In a report, The Council of Europe committee concluded the applicants' poor mental state was exacerbated by the indefinite nature of their detention. The British Government categorically rejected the suggestion that the applicants were treated in an inhuman or degrading manner at any point during their detention. As well as the mental harm they claim their detention in Britain caused them, the men also allege their detention was unlawful and they had only limited knowledge of the case against them and ability to challenge it. Eight of the men still in prison or at Broadmoor were released after Part 4 of the 2001 Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act was repealed. This followed a March 2005 ruling against it on human rights grounds by the House of Lords, Britain's upper house of parliament, sitting as the country's highest court . The eight men were then placed under control orders, a series of restrictions on the freedom of movement of terrorism suspects. The control orders were brought in by Britain's Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005 to replace indefinite detention. More recently, six of the men were place in immigration custody pending deportation to Algeria and Jordan, the European Court of Human Rights (photo) said. Two of the men have returned voluntarily to their home countries, a court official told Adnkronos International. |
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Iraq |
Slain militant is senior al-Qaeda figure: US military |
2007-10-15 |
![]() Separately, and as Muslims celebrate the Eid al-Fitr feast, a bomb on a bus went off killing six people and wounding 16 Sunday in northern Baghdad, a police source told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI). The commuter bus exploded in Eden square near the Shiite enclave of Kazimiyah. The condition of some of the wounded is serious due to the intensity of the explosion, according to hospital sources cited by the local agency. |
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Britain | |
Qatada set to appeal amid fears of torture | |
2007-02-26 | |
![]() Human Rights Watch said sending Qatada back to Jordan, which has not signed a treaty banning torture, would set a dangerous precedent. 'There is an important principle at stake here,' said Ben Ward, associate director of HRW. 'The prohibition against torture is an absolute prohibition. Governments are not allowed to deport people to countries which do not outlaw the use of torture, no matter what they have done. Such a ruling would create a loophole in the prohibition on torture.' The government has signed a memorandum of understanding with Jordan, which it insists will protect Qatada from being tortured if he is returned. It has signed similar understandings with Libya and Lebanon and struck an agreement with the Algerian government over the return of a number of alleged Islamic terrorists. But human rights groups say such agreements will do little to protect deported individuals.
A Siac judgment in March 2004 claimed Qatada was 'at the centre in the United Kingdom of terrorist activities associated with al-Qaeda'. It was said he had links to bin Laden and the then head of al-Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The court heard Qatada entered Britain on a false passport, and had raised funds for terrorist activities and helped to recruit extremists. He was also linked to Abu Doha, an Algerian alleged to have run a terror network operating out of Frankfurt that planned atrocities across Europe as well as a thwarted plot to blow up Los Angeles airport. But Qatada's lawyers say much of the evidence against him was provided by detainees in Guantanamo Bay who | |
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Europe |
Six Frenchmen released from Guantanamo to be tried |
2006-07-02 |
Six Frenchmen released from the US base in Guantanamo are to face trial in Paris for allegedly being recruited to fight in Afghanistan. Imad Achab Kanouni, Khaled Ben Mustapha, Redouane Khalid, Brahim Yadel, Mourad Benchellali and Nizar Sassi all face charges of "associating with criminals in relation to a terrorist enterprise". The latter two are also indicted on counterfeiting charges. Their trial starting Monday is expected to run to July 12. All the suspects except Yadel, who remains in detention, were freed by French authorities in the months following their repatriation from Guantanamo in July 2004 and March 2005. A seventh Frenchman who was held in Guantanamo and turned over to French authorities has since been cleared of any wrongdoing and faces no charges. The prosecution alleges that the six on trial were recruited from 1998 by an Algerian Rachid Boukhalfa, also known as Abu Doha, who is being held in a British prison. Boujhalfa, an Algerian, is suspected of having planned al-Qaeda attacks in the United States. The six went to Afghanistan between March 2000 and August 2001. Prosecutors allege they underwent guerrilla training in an al-Qaeda camp near Kandahar. They were captured by US troops after the 2001 invasion and sent to Guantanamo when the notorious US base there was converted in January 2002 to detain fighters deemed "illegal combatants". |
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Britain |
Terror suspect deported to Algeria |
2006-06-19 |
![]() Background information about Mr "I", including the alleged links with Abu Doha and other allegations levelled against him by the Government, are included in a Siac open judgment from 2004. The Home Office did not name Mr "I" in its statement late last night. But sources close to the Algerian disclosed to the British media that Mr "I" was the man deported. Mr "I" was imprisoned without charge or trial for three years under the Government's controversial Internment Powers. The Home Secretary has insisted that the Algerian was a senior member of the Abu Doha group and had received Mujahedeen training in Afghanistan. He was said to be an expert in manufacturing electrical explosives. A Home Office spokeswoman said: "An Algerian national representing a threat to the UK was exported to Algeria. The individual had withdrawn an appeal against deportation and is the second Algerian national deported to Algeria on National Security grounds. The British Government is grateful to the Algerian authorities for their cooperation in facilitating the deportation of this individual. This is an indication of our shared commitment in the fight against terrorism and of the warm relationship between our two countries." She confirmed that a number of other Algerians have withdrawn their appeals against deportation moves and that proceedings are underway to remove them from Britain. A number of others are appeal against deportation and their cases are currently before the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac)," she added. |
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Europe |
Terrorism and crime go hand-in-hand in Europe |
2006-01-18 |
Since the early 1990s, Western law enforcement agencies have noted an increasing reliance on criminal activity by terrorist networks around the world. Funding sources from the Persian Gulf, charities and other non-governmental fronts have been placed under pressure. This development, compounded by the arrests of several high-ranking coordinators and financiers of operations in Europe and North Americaâsuch as Abu Doha and Fateh Kamelâhave compelled jihadi networks to adapt and further diversify their funding sources. Consequently âtraditionalâ criminal activities like drug trafficking, robbery and smuggling are rapidly becoming the main source of terrorism funding. In fact, many recent terrorist attacks have been partly financed through crime proceeds. Throughout the 1990s, European law enforcement officers tasked with combating the Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA) networks noticed that operatives had penetrated local criminal structures in Europe and North Africa by using ethnic and cultural links. With the jihad in Algeria at its height, the under-funded GIA became actively involved in drugs and weapons trafficking through logistics and financial support cells in Europe. GIA members such as Djamel Lounici and Mourad Dhina also trafficked stolen vehicles and forged documents. Similarly, for years the Fateh Kamel network in Montreal and an affiliated cell in Istanbul benefited from trafficking in stolen vehicles, theft and credit card fraud. One of its Montreal members, the Millennium bomber Ahmed Ressam, had also planned a series of armed robberies to secure funding for his aborted attack on the Los Angeles airport in 1999. While a number of violent crimes involving jihadists have taken place in North Africa and Europe over the last decade, the full synthesis between criminality and terrorism took place in 1996 with a series of deadly armed robberies in the French town of Roubaix, which police initially assumed were perpetrated by criminals motivated solely by money. Following the attempted bombing of a G-7 meeting in Lille, French authorities discovered that the Roubaix gang was in fact a small Islamic militant organization that had also committed robberies in Bosnia to fund the jihad. An added benefit of these actionsâfrom the Roubaix gangâs point of viewâmay have been that these unconventional âfundraising operationsâ were, in fact, terrorizing in themselves. In December 2005, co-leader of the Roubaix gang and French convert Lionel Dumont was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Moreover, similar groups have been dismantled in France in the past months, including in a December 13th joint operation involving five French law enforcement agencies that netted over 25 suspects as well as high-grade explosives and weaponry. The group included known jihadists, radicalized delinquents and common criminals. Some of the members of this Zarqawi-linked cellâincluding presumed leader and ex-convict Ouassini Cherifiâwere also involved in a number of armored car robberies that were undertaken to raise funds for the movement of recruits to Iraq. A âtriangular tradeâ is steadily evolving that consists of weapons, stolen/contraband goods and narcotics. New al-Qaeda affiliates, notably the Groupe Salafiste pour la Prédication et le Combat (GSPC), the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group (GICM) and North African branches of Takfir wa al-Hijra (Excommunication and exile) have inherited old GIA networks spread across Europe and are actively involved in various types of trafficking to fund operations, trade in weaponry and explosives and move/shelter militants. In Europe, this nexus is mostly active in France and especially Spain, which because of its geography is a major transit (and destination) point for Moroccan cannabis as well as a hub for forged documents and credit cards (Le Nouvel Observateur, October 7, 2004). While networks were initially involved in drugs-for-weapons exchanges, many eventually shifted to direct drug trafficking. Moroccan sources suspect drug money to be the main source of funding for the May 16, 2003 attacks in Casablanca. Moreover, according to Spanish police, the funding for the March 11, 2004 Madrid train attacks came from drug trafficking, and many of those who took part in the preparation and execution of the attack had been involved in criminal activities such as stolen vehicle trading, jewel thefts and various types of counterfeiting (La Vanguardia, May 24, 2005). Furthermore, over half of the members of the group planning suicide strikes against the Spanish High Court later that year were already in jail on drug-trafficking-related charges. Additionally, in June and November of this year, Spanish police uncovered operational and logistics cells of the GSPC and the Zarqawi networks, and discovered that the suspects had engaged in credit card fraud, robberies, drug trafficking and vehicle theft. At times an operational cell may partially fund itself, as when police found 7 kilograms of hashish in the hideout of the suspects planning to bomb the Strasbourg cathedral in 2000. Although financed by Abu Doha, the group had been raising funds through drug trafficking in Frankfurt and London. Many other Islamist cells dismantled in Europe following September 11, 2001, had engaged in drug trafficking, including an al-Qaeda linked group operating in Antwerp and Brussels and a cell in the Netherlands involved in the assassination of Ahmad Shah Massoud. Aside from narcotics, militants and sympathizers also traffic in precious stones and metals, mainly because they are easy to transport and difficult to trace. This was the case with a Tunisian man charged in Germany with planning attacks against Western targets, who had used a travel agency as a front for gold and silver trafficking (Agence France-Presse, November 30, 2004). Front companies are ideal vehicles to transfer illicit funds and since the mid-1990s, dozens of terrorist front companies have been dismantled in Europe. Recent arrests in France uncovered a GICM support cell (linked to the Madrid bombings) operating various business ventures, just as Ould Slahiâinvolved in major al-Qaeda plots and closely linked to al-Qaeda financier Khaled Al Shanquitiâwas first arrested in 1999 for laundering drug money through his import-export firm. Following the arrests of several key players in the GIAâs European operations in the mid-1990s, networks reorganized themselves around contraband and arms-smuggling rings influenced by elements of the Russian and Sicilian mafia (the latter has also laundered money for the GIA) [1]. These types of relationships arise from mutual benefit, with the terrorists seeking entry into established trafficking/money laundering channels and traditional criminal groups taking advantage of profit opportunities. Ethnic or religious links are not necessarily essential for collaboration to take place; for example, the Madrid bombings were facilitated by members of local criminal groups and petty thieves. When in 2001 the Spanish police conducted a counter-narcotics operation, which netted, among other items, hashish, explosives and detonators, they initially arrested the procurer of explosives for 3/11, José Suárez. Furthermore, the arrests of Marc Muller and Stephen Wendler in the mid-1990s were two of many examples where arms traffickers knowingly supplied terrorist groups with weapons from ex-soviet bloc states. In a case of direct barter, two Pakistanis and a U.S. citizen were detained in Hong Kong in 2002 in an attempt to exchange 600kg of heroin and five tons of hashish for four Stinger missiles, which they intended to sell to al-Qaeda. Since traffickers and terrorist organizations have similar logistical needs, there is ample room for collaboration in money laundering and even facilitating illegal immigration. Recent evidence from Morocco strongly suggests that jihadists are increasingly reliant on outsourcing to specialized migrant smuggling networks to infiltrate or exfiltrate targeted countries (La Gazette du Maroc, February 9, 2004). There are additional concerns that trafficking channels can be used to move heavy weaponry and even weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and WMD components. In December 2004 members of Takfir were arrested in Barcelona for allegedly trying to purchase over 400kg of industrial explosives and material from a Czech source to build a âdirty bombâ (MAP Maghreb Arebe Presse, October 28, 2005). Moreover, in a recent case of arms smuggling from Russia, traffickers attempted to sell high-powered armsâand reportedly uraniumâto an FBI informant posing as a middleman for al-Qaeda. To retain legitimacy, contemporary terrorist groups are particularly concerned about providing religious justification for their acts, criminal or otherwise. The writings of a 13th century Islamic jurist, Ibn Taymiyya, are an important source of authorization in regard to seizing the enemyâs property during jihad. During the Algerian jihad, Ali Benhadj (a leader of the Islamic Salvation FrontâFIS) quoted Ibn Taymiyya in declaring a fatwa authorizing GIA groups to assassinate and seize the property of all Muslims who opposed them. Terrorist mastermind Sheik Abdel Rahman had also authorized robbery against âthe miscreants and the apostate state,â while in 1998 Osama bin Laden echoed this in his call to kill Americans and âplunder their money wherever and whenever they find it.â In January 2004 a member of the Moroccan group, Salafiya Jihadiya admitted being shown videos that legitimized and promoted robbing âinfidels and hypocrite Muslims,â suggesting that encouraging criminal behavior is emerging as an integral feature of al-Qaedaâs internal propaganda. While Islamists are widely viewed as uncompromising literalists, pragmatism in the search for funds is evident in the religious decree by Salafist ideologue Nasreddine El Eulmi, which authorized the use and sale of drugs during the Algerian jihad. The most radical of contemporary terrorist groups, the Takfir, explicitly encourages robbery and drug trafficking as long as a fifth of the proceeds are used to fund the Islamist cause (Le Parisien, September 8, 2002). Arrests in Morocco in 2002 confirmed that its members were encouraged by their emir to steal âjewels, credit cards and moneyâ from their victims (Maroc-Hebdo, August 3, 2002). For terrorist organizations, the source of funding is irrelevant and only matters because it procures weapons, facilitates movement and produces propaganda. Even major operations cost relatively small sums when compared with the vast revenues of organized crime groups. For example, major operations like the Madrid bombings cost anywhere between $15,000 to $35,000, while the annual profits from cannabis trafficking in Europe alone are estimated at $12 billion. The incorporation of organized criminality into terrorist ideology and operations shows the flexibility of terrorist organizations in adapting to dynamic fundraising environments. The border between the two worlds is ever more porous, with terror suspects now often imprisoned on multiple charges, both criminal and terrorist. This poses significant challenges to law enforcement agencies, which have traditionally targeted terrorism and criminality separately. |
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Britain | |
British intel has links between deportees and al-Qaeda | |
2005-08-26 | |
As British police prepare the first deportations of so-called âpreachers of hate and intoleranceâ, which Home Secretary Charles Clarke yesterday confirmed could happen âvery quickly â in the next few daysâ, new evidence has emerged about the direct terror links of the ten men detained on Aug. 12, including radical Jordanian cleric Abu Qatada, pending deportation. ![]() Eight of the ten detainees are Algerians who have been granted asylum in the UK over the last few years. There are believed to belong to a cell operated by Abu Doha, who is in British custody pending extradition proceedings to the US over an alleged plot in 1999 to attack Los Angeles International Airport. The Abu Doha cell is also accused of planning a ricin poison attack on the London tube system and plans to attack popular tourist sites in the West End. According to the report, the evidence against some of the detainees is clear and overwhelming. One Algerian was an explosives expert who taught at an Al-Qaeda training camp in Afghanistan. Another sponsored young British Muslims to travel to Afghanistan for training.
The ten detainees have already started appeals proceedings against the detention and deportations. Legal sources say that the eventual cost to the taxpayer of expelling then detainees could exceed 5 million pounds. This would depend on how long the appeal process takes. Gareth Peirce, the lawyer who represents most of the detainees, said that the appeals could be drawn out to up to three years. However, Clarkeâs measures includes ways of speeding up the legal process for deportations. Despite the âstrongâ evidence and the sweeping measures announced on Wednesday by Home Secretary Charles Clarke including a list of âunacceptable behaviorsâ by foreigners which Britian would not tolerate anymore, some of the radicals are effectively challenging the might of the British state. One Yasser Al-Sirri, an Egyptian convicted for the murder of a six-year-old girl who died in a bomb blast in Cairo, yesterday mocked Clarkeâs measures saying that the British courts would never allow detainees to be deported to Middle East countries where they would be certainly tortured and abused. âI am not worried about expulsion,â boasted Al-Siri yesterday in an interview in the Evening Standard, âMy legal team thinks it is impossible. I donât think any British judge can accept any agreement between the UK and any Middle Eastern country like Egypt. Any judge here can take this agreement and throw it in the rubbish basket. I still trust the UK with human rights, while Tony Blair may want to change the laws, there is still the Magna Carta.â | |
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Europe |
Euros springing hard boyz |
2005-07-31 |
Ahmed Ressam's lawyer expects him to be locked up a long time. "Anything less than 20 years would be a miracle," says Tom Hillyer. The Algerian's nervous tics caught a U.S. Customs inspector's eye as Ressam arrived from Canada in December 1999 with the makings of four powerful bombs. A year later he was convicted of plotting to bomb Los Angeles International Airport. Faced with a prison term of up to 130 years, Ressam gave evidence that helped authorities round up numerous alleged associates. In the months before 9/11 he told U.S. investigators about a network of Qaeda fixers and sympathizers in the United States, Canada and Europe with links to Osama bin Laden's training camps in Afghanistan. Ressam's sentencing hearing is due next month. Prosecutors have promised him no more than 27 years behind bars. But some of the suspects he fingered in Britain and France are already going free, despite his testimony and corroborating reports from intelligence agencies across two continents. One worrisome case is that of Fateh Kamel. Labeled a jihadi "mastermind" by law-enforcement sources in Europe and North America, he allegedly helped to recruit Ressam to the cause. He was arrested on a visit to Jordan and extradited to France, where in 2001 he was sentenced to eight years for trafficking in forged ID papers and "association" with terrorists implicated in subway bombings there. The evidence against him included Italian wiretaps. "I'm not afraid of dying, and killing doesn't frighten me," he was quoted as saying. "If I have to press the remote control, long live the jihad!" France released him in January, reportedly for "good behavior," and a Canadian government source confirms Kamel is back in Canada. Al-Zarqawi set up a British terror cell that Qatada may have led Reuters Al-Zarqawi set up a British terror cell that Qatada may have led A former roommate of Ressam's is among at least six other alleged associates being freed in Britain. They were jailed under a post-9/11 law saying foreign militants could be detained indefinitely based on intelligence reports, but British judges struck down the law late last year on human-rights grounds. Last week they were all set free. British court documents say the former roommate, identified only as "S," received Qaeda training in Afghanistan. He and the others were said to be close associates of a British-based jihadi known as Abu Doha, who once helped run Al Qaeda's Afghan training network, according to British authorities. Ressam tagged him as a key contact in the plotting of the L.A. airport attack. He's in jail awaiting extradition to the United States. Among those released was another London jihadi once labeled "truly dangerous" by a British judge. Radical imam Abu Qatada claims to be a religious scholar with no terrorist ties. But he has been described by investigators as Al Qaeda's "ambassador" in Europe, and had been held without charges for two years. German government documents describe him as the onetime leader of a British terror cell set up by the notorious Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi, a fellow Jordanian, but no one has produced the kind of evidence that would convict the imam in a British court. Under Parliament's newly approved antiterror controls, Abu Qatada and other former British detainees will be on the streets, but their activities are supposed to be closely monitored. U.S. officials won't say what they're doing to guard against the threat of new attacks by former detainees. Other countries failed to make a solid case against them. It's far from certain that America could do better. |
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Home Front: WoT |
Would-be millennium bomber sentenced to 22 years |
2005-07-27 |
SEATTLE â A man who plotted to bomb Los Angeles International Airport on the eve of the millennium was sentenced Wednesday to 22 years in prison, a penalty that reflected some of his cooperation in telling international investigators about the workings of terror camps in Afghanistan. Still, Ahmed Ressam, 38, could have received a shorter sentence had he not stopped talking to investigators in early 2003. Prosecutors argued that his recalcitrance has jeopardized cases against two of his co-conspirators. Ressam, 38, was arrested in Port Angeles in December 1999 as he drove off a ferry from British Columbia with a trunk full of bomb-making materials. After being convicted of terrorist conspiracy and explosives charges at his 2001 trial, Ressam began cooperating in hopes of winning a reduced sentence. Ressam told investigators from several countries about the operation of terror camps, but quit cooperating by early 2003. His lawyers said years of solitary confinement took their toll on his mental state, but prosecutors insisted he simply didn't feel like cooperating any more. Prosecutors recommended a 35-year sentence; Ressam's lawyers asked for 12œ years. Ressam had been scheduled for sentencing in April. After more than two hours of arguments, U.S. District Judge John C. Coughenour called it off, giving Ressam three more months to resume cooperation. Coughenour and federal prosecutors want Ressam to testify against his two co-conspirators, Samir Ait Mohamed and Abu Doha, who are awaiting extradition from Canada and Britain, respectively. |
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