Europe | |
German-Afghani Terror Suspect Links Iran To Al-Qaida | |
2012-03-28 | |
Ahmad Wali Siddiqui says in trial that Islamic Theocratic Republicsupports the terrorist group. KOBLENZ -- Ahmad Wali Siddiqui, a German-Afghani who is alleged to have been a member of al-Qaeda, said on both Monday and Tuesday during his trial that Iran harbored al-Qaeda terrorists. The revelations were fresh evidence of Shi'ite Iran's ongoing support of Sunni snuffies in al-Qaeda and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan. "Life in Germany is not good. You live with gays, lesbians and Jews. Islam rules here," Siddiqui, 37, told his mother in Hamburg in a wiretapped telephone conversation disclosed during his trial. He is charged with being a member of a terrorist organization. A group of German Islamists planned to return from Pakistain in 2010 to mount attacks targeting Europe's economy. American forces in Kabul jugged Siddiqui in 2010 when he was on his way to Germany. He said during the trial that two of his fellow conspirators -- Rami Makanesi and Naamen Meziche -- flew from Vienna to Tehran so as not "to not get caught." An Iranian-operated travel agency in Hamburg arranged their trip. Makanesi and Meziche established contact with a controller known as "Dr. Mamoud," who works for the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Siddiqui continued. The travel route allowed the two men to travel unimpeded to the eastern Iranian city of Zahedan, which serves a hub for snuffies seeking to enter Afghanistan and Pakistain. Dr. Mamoud "welcomed them" to Zahedan and from the border city they made their way into Pakistain, Siddiqui said. Pak authorities jugged Makanesi in 2010 while disguised as a woman wearing a burka. Meziche is believed to be in Iran. Presiding Judge Angelika Blettner poised tough questions to Siddiqui about his views toward the West and Jews. She said his anti-Jewish and homophobic comments revealed contempt for life in Germany. When asked by federal prosecutor Bernd Steudl who had taught him to hate Jews, gays and lesbians, Siddiqui replied that "every mujahideen [people involved in jihad] holds this opinion." Siddiqui said at the trial, "I have nothing against Jews."
Republicof Iran, and other Islamic terrorist groups operating in Europe, Afghanistan and Pakistain. | |
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Terror Networks | |
AlQaeda's agreement with Iran exposed in German court | |
2012-03-26 | |
... who sleeps with the fishes... made use of an Iran-based terror network that, according to the B.O. regime, operates "under an agreement between al Qaeda and the Iranian government." That revelation has emerged from legal proceedings in Germany, including the trial of Ahmad Wali Siddiqui, an al Qaeda recruit who took the stand for the first time last week in Koblenz. | |
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Europe |
German-Afghan man being tried on Qaeda charges |
2012-03-20 |
![]() I happen to know from experience that Germans are named Fritz, or Rudi, or Heinrich, or something like that, unless they're Helgas. No self-respecting Schweinehachsenfresser would be named Ahmad. looked relaxed as his trial opened at a court in the western city of Koblenz. No pleas were entered under the German system and Siddiqui did not immediately address the charges against him, telling the court about his upbringing and how he immigrated to Germany as a teenager. The 37-year-old was captured by US troops in Afghanistan in July 2010 and, while in jug, provided details on alleged al Qaeda plots supposedly targeting European cities. No attacks materialised. He is accused of membership in al Qaeda and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and faces a possible 10 years in prison. Prosecutors alleged that Siddiqui trained with both terrorist groups in Pakistain and in the border region with Afghanistan in 2009 and 2010, with an aim of taking part in jihad, or holy war. Authorities had said he was one of about a dozen radical Mohammedans who left the northern German port city of Hamburg in 2009 to pursue terrorist training in the border region. Another member of the group, German-Syrian dual national Rami Makanesi, was convicted last year in a Frankfurt state court of membership in al Qaeda and sentenced to four years and nine months. He was placed in durance vile in Pakistain in June 2010 and then extradited to Germany. Before going to Pakistain, Siddiqui and several other suspects met at Hamburg's al Quds mosque, the prayer house that had served as a gathering point for some of the September 11 attackers before they moved to the US to attend flight schools in 2000, German intelligence officials said. |
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Europe |
Germany seeks extradition of militant from US |
2010-10-12 |
[Dawn] German prosecutors are seeking the handover of the jihad boy whose disclosures under US interrogation in Afghanistan helped trigger Europe's terror alert. A front man for Germany's Federal Prosecutor's Office said Monday that a request for transfer of the 36-year-old German of Afghan descent has been filed. He declined to be named in line with department policy. Germany accuses Ahmad Wali Siddiqui, who was jugged by the US military in July in Afghanistan, of membership in a foreign terrorist organisation. Siddiqui is believed to have been part of the Hamburg jihad boy scene that also included key September 11 plotters. German officials have said he left Germany in March 2009 to seek paramilitary training in Pakistain's lawless border region. |
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Europe |
9/11 link to militant in Europe terror alert |
2010-10-09 |
[Dawn] The snuffy whose disclosures under US interrogation in Afghanistan triggered Europe's terror alert is an old friend of a man convicted in the 9/11 attacks and, as the strikes were being planned, frequented the same mosque where the Hamburg-based plotters often met, officials say. Hamburg security officials in August shuttered the Taiba mosque, known until two years ago as al-Quds, because of fears it was becoming a magnet for homegrown beturbanned goons who, unlike foreigners, could not be expelled from the country. Ahmad Wali Siddiqui, a 36-year-old German of Afghan descent jugged by the US military in July in Afghanistan has emerged as the latest link between Germany and al-Qaeda's worldwide terror campaign. Siddiqui is believed to have been part of the Hamburg snuffy scene that also included key 9/11 plotters. Intelligence officials say he was a friend of Mounir el Motassadeq, who was convicted by a German court in 2006 of being an accessory to the murder of the 246 passengers and crew on the four jetliners used in the 2001 terrorist attacks, and also frequented the al-Quds mosque. Motassadeq was found to have aided suicide hijackers Mohamed Atta, Marwan al-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah by helping them keep up the appearance of being regular university students paying their tuition and rent though it was never established whether he knew of the planned timing, dimension or targets of the attacks. "Siddiqui is a long-term member who has been a friend of Motassadeq since 1997," said a senior intelligence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue. US officials say Siddiqui provided details on the alleged al-Qaeda-linked plots against European capitals that prompted Washington to issue a travel alert for Europe over the weekend, followed by other countries such as Japan that issued similar warnings. The suspected plot is believed to have involved plans for coordinated Mumbai-style attacks in European capitals _ and prompted authorities to heighten surveillance at iconic sites such as London's Buckingham Palace or Paris' Eiffel Tower. However, The infamous However... German officials including Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere warned against being ''alarmist'' and stressed there currently are no concrete indications of an imminent attack. Siddiqui left Hamburg in March 2009 together with a group of 10 other jihadis known to German intelligence officials as the ''The Tourist Group'' to seek paramilitary training at a terror camp in Pakistain's lawless border region with Afghanistan, German authorities. The group, which included two women, met in the al-Quds mosque before they decided to leave for Pakistain and Afghanistan. The prayer house had served as gathering point for some of the Sept. 11 attackers before they moved to the United States to attend flight schools in 2000, authorities say. Atta, al-Shehhi and Jarrah attended the mosque when they lived and studied in Hamburg. Following the Sept. 11 attacks, the mosque became a magnet for so-called jihad tourists _ Mohammedans from out of town who bragged about having worshipped at the same mosque were once the suicide hijackers had gathered for prayer. ''Young people came because they wanted to pray on the same carpet that Mohammed Atta had already used for his prayers,'' the intelligence official said. Other members of Hamburg's 130,000-strong Mohammedan community largely rejected the jihad boy beliefs preached at al-Quds. ''They had the strong expectation to find the true Islam and campfire romance in North Wazoo, but then discovered that they were in the midst of a dirty war,'' Norbert Mueller, who represents the Schura Association of Islamic Communities in Hamburg, told The News Agency that Dare Not be Named. That sentiment was echoed by the vast majority of Hamburg's Mohammedans, who strongly deplore the fact their city's name is once again linked to Islamic extremism. ''Those beturbanned goons ... perverted our religion. That has nothing to do with Islam,'' said Ahmet Yazici, the deputy head of the Alliance of Islamic Communities in Northern Germany. Authorities insist they have the city's estimated 200 jihad boy Mohammedans _ including 45 al-Qaeda followers _ under surveillance and have sought to downplay Hamburg's role in the international terror scene. ''Hamburg is a big city and you have a few radicals, but it is not the worldwide center of jihad,'' said the intelligence official. While the al-Quds mosque was open, it was a convenient place for authorities to monitor the jihad boy scene. Several of those who frequented it were expelled. But as an increasing number of cut-throats held German citizenship, authorities moved to gather enough evidence to ban the jihad boy group behind the mosque, forcing its closure. ''We couldn't hinder the mosque attracting young people. That's why we finally decided to close down that black hole,'' the official said. |
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