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Hussain Osman Hussain Osman al-Qaeda Britain 20050731  
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    accused of detonating a bomb on a London Underground train

Britain
Jihad From Jail
2012-02-20
Islamic snuffies using network website MohammedanPrisoner.com to preach hatred from behind bars

Abu Hamza, Abu Qatada and Osman Hussain are some of the snuffies using the site
Website is used as networking tool for jihadist turbans
Posts celebrate murder of innocent people and urge fresh atrocities against the West
Inmates urged to lie about their reform to get early release to continue holy war
Letters reveal prisoners are radicalising other inmates
Ministry of Justice said it recognises risk posed by bad turban offenders


Islamic snuffies are using the internet to spread their hatred from behind bars.

Dozens of letters written by some of the world's most dangerous snuffies - including those locked up for murderous plots in Britannia - have been published on MohammedanPrisoners.com
The hate-filled messages celebrate murder of innocent people and urge fresh atrocities against the West.

The website is being used as a networking tool for the jihadist hard boyz - many with links to al-Qaeda - and encourages the public to send emails, with the promise that their letters will be passed onto the inmates.

Its users include notorious hate preachers Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada. who was released under strict bail conditions, which include a ban on him using the internet, this month.

Leaders of terrorist plots targeting passenger planes and London landmarks are also said to have used the website, including Hussain Osman, nabbed for his botched attempt to blow up Shepherd's Bush Tube station in 2005.

It is claimed the website was set up by Abdul Muhid, a member of the banned Al-Muhajiroun group, who has served time in jail for inciting murder and hatred during protests over Prophet Mohammed cartoons.

The Sunday Times reported that among messages posted on the website, are some from Abdulla Ahmed Ali, caged for at least 40 years as leader of a suicide plot to blow up trans-Atlantic passenger jets.

Ahmed hails the 'humiliating defeat' inflicted on NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
forces in Afghanistan by the Taliban.

His message - posted last month - read: 'If the mushriks [non believers] can leave their families and sacrifice their lives and limbs to occupy, enslave and oppress the ummah [global Mohammedan community] then we too can sacrifice 100 times that to defend it.'

There are also jihadist messages from Bilal Zaheer Ahmad, nabbed last year after calling on Mohammedans to copy Roshonara Choudhry and murder MPs who voted for the Iraq war.

Ahmad's letters also includes calls for inmates to lie about their reform so they can be freed early to the continue their holy war and reveal bad turban material is freely available to inmates and that he is in direct contact with Choudhry.

Last July he wrote: 'I received a letter from that sister during the week. She said it feels like she was only locked away yesterday and the last year of her life has been the best.'
Choudhry, who attempted to murder former Labour minister Stephen Timms, is also reported to have posted on the website, describing the euphoria she felt from having the support of Mohammedans when she was nabbed at the Old Bailey.

Another inmate, Hamza Davidson, 34, who is serving a life sentence, is said to have claimed to be studying books by Bilal Philips, a Jamaican preacher who calls for homosexuals to be executed and was banned from Britannia.

Other letters reveal snuffies are radicalising other inmates. A Commons select committee report on radicalisation this month claimed one prisoner was persuaded to become a jacket wallah within 72 hours of arriving at London's Belmarsh prison.

The website also features jihadist video footage and legal experts have warned the website could have breached laws on inciting terrorism.

Labour MP Steve McCabe, who sits on the Commons home affairs committee, said: "Some of this stuff sounds dangerously close to incitement.

'If the prison authorities claim they are monitoring and censoring material, then they are clearly not doing it effectively.'

The website was taken down after the newspaper contacted Muhid - but a single homepage remains and features and email address fro people to send their letters, and quotes from the Qur'an.

Muhid denies glorifying terrorism, has offered to take down anything amounting to incitement and stressed inmates' letters had to be screened by prison authorities.

He said he did not intend to break the law, and added: 'Our role is to connect prisoners with the outside world...increasing the morale of these people.'

But Muhid admitted a disproportionate number of letters were sent to inmates with terrorism links and said the only just law is Islamic law.

A Ministry of Justice (MoJ) source said prisoners were not able to contribute directly to websites and that the department was aware of it.

An MoJ front man said: "The National Offender Management Service (Noms) recognises the risks posed by bad turban offenders and those who seek to radicalise others and takes their responsibility to effectively manage these risks seriously.

"Since 2007 a dedicated, expert unit has led a programme of work across prisons and probation to strengthen our response to the threat from these offenders, drawing on our long history of managing terrorist prisoners and other dangerous individuals.

"All high-security establishments have a dedicated counter-terrorism unit, and a national unit also exists to analyse intelligence from the High Security Estate.

'Noms' response to the current threat has included staff training in extremism awareness, the ongoing development of interventions designed to assist offenders in disengagement from extremism and the strengthening of the role of the Mohammedan chaplain in prisons.'
Link


Britain
'I was groomed for jihad in Britain'
2009-05-17
A teenager has revealed how he was recruited by Al-Qaeda-inspired extremists and groomed to carry out suicide attacks in Britain. In the first insider account of how radicals are preying on vulnerable Muslim youths, the teenager describes being approached by Islamists at a mosque in south London that was used by the failed 21/7 bombers, and indoctrinated at a secret network of squats. Aged 15, he was the youngest of about 50 recruits who were shown “martyrdom” videos and encouraged to travel to Pakistan to receive terrorist training.

The youth, who is called Adam, told The Sunday Times: “They showed us a jihadist video with the martyrdom flags behind the guy speaking, and the message I got was that I should prepare myself for martyrdom. I know a few of the others accepted that they would go [for training in Pakistan]. Some of the young people said, ‘I’m going to go’. That was the ultimate purpose of what these men were doing: what they were doing was training people up to carry out operations in the UK.”

Adam, who is now 18, quit the group after a year. The whereabouts of most of the other recruits is unknown. “It was quite shocking to me,” he said. “I started to think, ‘Well, hold on a second, I don’t want to kill anybody. Yeah, I’ve got anger inside me, but this isn’t the right way to deal with this’.” Adam, whose real name is being withheld to protect his safety, is now enrolled in a rehabilitation programme for would-be terrorists. The scheme is a blueprint for a nationwide “detoxification” programme backed by the Home Office and police chiefs to which 200 people — some as young 13 — have been referred.

When Adam fell under the spell of extremists at the Stockwell mosque in Lambeth in 2005, he was floundering at school, had few friends and was desperately in need of some direction. He was the eldest of seven children whose Algerian father had died when he was just eight, and his new friends’ talk of Muslim brotherhood seemed to offer the stability he craved. “A lot of people think that terrorists are recruited in special recruiting grounds, but the truth is that it actually goes on in mosques a lot of the time,” said the gangly south London teenager. “You’ll go to pray and there’ll be small groups of people just away from the main group in the mosque having their own discussion, talking about jihad and all these types of things. They started talking to me about what’s going on in Iraq and about how all the people are dying and then they started inviting me to religious talks.”

The Stockwell mosque had previously been attended by Muktar Ibrahim and Hussain Osman, two of the four men who failed in their attempt to carry out suicide bombings on London’s transport network on July 21, 2005 — two weeks after the 7/7 attacks which killed 52 commuters. Adam’s new mentors were Mohammed Hamid, a preacher with links to the 21/7 bombers who called himself Osama Bin London, and Atilla Ahmet, a former aide to Abu Hamza, the hook-handed cleric of Finsbury Park mosque in north London.

A month after Adam was approached at the mosque, he was invited to the first of many meetings at a rundown squat in south London. It was here — and in similar buildings — that the real process of indoctrination went on, with exposure to violent videos, including footage of beheadings. “They would show us videos of people bragging about 7/7 and 9/11 and they made it clear that they approved of it,” said Adam, who was one of two 15-year-old recruits, the youngest out of a group of 15-20 men. “They weren’t as blunt as to say, ‘Yes, we did this’ or ‘We did that’. They were more aware than anyone that there’s a chance that someone in that room could be recording them.”

Adam was told that more advanced recruits had been sent on training exercises to the Lake District and the New Forest in Hampshire, as well as paintballing sessions in the home counties. At Ibrahim’s trial it emerged that several of these training camps were the subject of police surveillance.

Adam said Ahmet and Hamid, who helped to radicalise some of the 21/7 bombers at his east London home, often distorted quotes from the Koran to back their arguments. “For example, the Koran says killing innocents is one of the biggest sins, but they would say that the innocents were just collateral damage and it was therefore okay,” said Adam. Unlike Ibrahim, Adam never travelled to Pakistan. Hamid and Ahmet were arrested in a south London restaurant in September 2006 with seven other followers. The pair were jailed for terrorism offences last year.

Adam and about 45 other young men are now being rehabilitated through a training programme run by an education centre attached to Stockwell mosque. Designed and run by Toaha Qureshi, a mosque trustee, the programme’s intensive courses combine religious and social mentoring with sports activities and business training. One former would-be suicide bomber has recently set up his own car-washing business with the Stockwell centre’s help. “We have another young man who has been with us for almost nine months,” said Qureshi. “He spent time in prison on terrorism charges, but now works here, as well as completing his foundation course in business. We are working here to protect the community by re-engaging these young men into productive activity.”

In 2003, when Qureshi first complained about extremists “inciting racial and religious hatred” at Stockwell mosque, police took little action. Now the authorities are showing a keen interest in the success of his “detox” programme. Indeed, it is virtually a blueprint for a controversial national rehabilitation scheme called the Channel Project. Set up by the Home Office in 2007 with pilot schemes in Lambeth and Lancashire, the project has since been expanded to 11 sites across the UK, and there are plans for a further 15.

More than 200 people — including two 13-year-olds and some individuals as old as 50 — have been identified as “vulnerable” to radicalisation and offered support via the Channel Project. The programme relies on teachers, parents and other community figures to be vigilant for signs indicating an attraction to extremist views. Commander Craig Denholm, the police officer responsible for overseeing Channel, denied that it amounted to “spying” on the Muslim community.

Reflecting on his indoctrination and the prospect of becoming a suicide bomber, Adam admitted last week: “I feel very grateful that I didn’t go down that road. Now I want an office job.”

The Telegraph has a story about the Channel Project here.
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Fifth Column
Somalian jihad course attendee tells court group was in Scotland to hunt the Loch Ness monster
2007-12-27
AN ELECTRICIAN accused of being a Muslim unholy holy warrior claimed he was hunting Nessie during an cough alleged jihad training course.

Somali-born Kader Ahmed, 20, told a court he went on a trip arranged by preacher Mohammed Hamid, 50, to Scotland at Christmas 2004. He said they visited Inverness and Loch Ness and added: "I'd never been to Scotland before. It was very cold when we went up. It was snowing.
OK...
Ahmed, from east London, admits going on camping trips and paintballing sessions with Hamid's group, who included four of the men later convicted of the plot to bomb London on July 21, 2005.

But the trainee electrician, who was 17 when he met Hamid, told Woolwich Crown Court he assumed it was harmless fun "like Scouts or Cadets".
And Islam is Peaceful
His barrister, Hugh Mullan, asked him: "Was the atmosphere solemn and militaristic?" It was fairly busy - a lot of tourists. They were kind of shocked at the big beards but we spoke to them just to break the ice."
Ya we just came to blow up Nessie. Allan should be please, what'ya thing bout that?
He said: "When I first went (to Hamid's house),it was all open. There were a lot of people my age saying, 'We're gonna do this, we're gonna do that'.

"It was friendly and warm. It was just relaxed, just people talking."
Don't you just love the sweet smell of C-4, reminds me of the Hajj
Mr Mullan asked him: "Did you think you were being trained to go and fight in a foreign country?"

Ahmed replied: "Never, no."
We thought staying here for jihad would save on air miles
He accepted the terrorists convicted of the July 21 plot were part of the extended group that used to attend Hamid's events in 2004 and 2005. But he said he was with Hamid on a camping trip in France in the immediate aftermath of the failed bomb attack and did not know his acquaintances Ramzi Mohammed, Hussain Osman and Muktar Ibrahim had been arrested until he returned.

He said: "We thought it was like a frame-up."
"They keep picking on us!"
He said he later subscribed to a theory that the same anti-Muslim elements were responsible for faking the September 11 attacks on America and the London attacks.
Think he's guilty?
The trial continues.
Link


Britain
London bomb plotters jailed for life
2007-07-11
Four men convicted of a conspiracy to bomb London's public transport system in July 2005 were jailed for life on Wednesday, with the judge setting them a minimum term of 40 years. The four -- Muktar Said Ibrahim, Yassin Omar, Ramzi Mohammed, and Hussain Osman -- were found guilty Monday over a failed bid to set off four bombs in London on July 21, 2005, two weeks after suicide bombings which killed 56.
Link


Britain
Three guilty over UK 7/21 bomb plot
2007-07-09
Three defendants in the 21 July terror trial have been found guilty of a plot to bomb London's transport network. Jurors found Muktar Said Ibrahim, 29, Yassin Omar, 26, and Ramzi Mohammed, 25, guilty of conspiracy to murder.

The verdicts of three other defendants, who all deny charges against them, are still being considered by the jury of nine women and three men.

Woolwich Crown Court heard how the cell tried to detonate bombs on three tube trains and a bus on July 21, 2005. The suspects had claimed the bombs were fakes, and the attacks had been intended as a protest against the war in Iraq.
Honestly, y'honour, it was, like, street theatre an' stuff. Art, ya know. Prolly should be gettin' grants an' an agent.
After unanimously returning three guilty verdicts against Ibrahim, Omar and Mohammed, jurors were sent out to continue their deliberations on the three other defendants, Hussain Osman, Manfo Kwaku Asiedu and Adel Yahya. The judge, Mr Justice Fulford QC, said he would accept a majority verdict of 10-2.
Link


Britain
7/7 Bomber Escaped Wearing His Mother-in-Law's Burka
2007-05-05
Koranimals exposed
A man accused of detonating a bomb on a London Underground train told a court yesterday how he fled the capital disguised in a burka. Yassin Omar said he escaped 24 hours after he set off a rucksack device on July 21, 2005, as he was terrified the police would shoot him.
terrified? but for the opportunity..
He said he took one of his mother-in-law's black burkas because she "had lots of them".
no comment
"She had lotsa sexy underwear, too, to I took some of them. And bras. I really like the lacy ones, with just a little bit of padding."
She used to sell them so there was one which was big enough to fit his 6ft 2in frame, Woolwich Crown Court, South London, heard.
this a**hole would be 3' 2" if I had a shot..
He smiled as he was shown CCTV footage of himself in the burka and holding a handbag, walking to get a coach with his wife.
VIDEO at link
"That burka don't make me look fat, does it?"
He said, "That's me. If I didn't disguise myself or go into hiding they would have shot me." He said he had told his wife they had to go away because his face would be on TV. Omar claimed he feared the same fate as Jean Charles de Menezes, the Brazilian shot and killed on the Tube by police who wrongly believed he was a suicide bomber. When he heard of the death, he thought co-defendant Hussain Osman had been killed.
Brave Islamic Lion [not] willing to butcher the innocents but yet so afraid to die himself..
Omar, from New Southgate, North London, was arrested by armed specialists from West Midlands Police who broke into his safe house on July 27. He was woken by "something like a robot making a lot of noise", he said, and was found standing in the bath, fully clothed and wearing a rucksack.
LOL, trembling no doubt.
"I thought if I was wearing a bag they would have to think twice and ask what I had got in there - then I would have had a chance to explain," he said. Omar claimed he was shocked with a Taser stun gun several times, hit with a rifle butt, punched and dragged across the floor.
more revolting pics of the perps at the link.. RD
Link


Britain
London attacks a hoax, court heard
2007-03-02
Failed bomb attacks on London's transit system in July 2005 were a hoax intended to protest Britain's involvement in the Iraq war, a suspect claimed in transcripts of a police interview read out in the trial. Explosives containing a mixture of flour and acid were made the day before the attacks on July 21, 2005, and were supposed to cause fear but not injuries, suspect Hussain Osman told Italian investigators. He fled London after the failed attacks and was arrested in Rome on July 29, 2005. Osman, 28, is one of six men accused of conspiring to bomb subway trains and a bus, two weeks after four suicide bombers killed themselves and 52 commuters in London. No one was injured in the July 21 attacks.

Osman; Muktar Said Ibrahim, 29; Adel Yahya, 24; Manfu Asiedu, 33; Yassin Omar, 26; and Ramzi Mohamed, 25 all deny charges of conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to cause explosions. The court was told Omar gave his interview in Italian. Born in Ethiopia, he spent five years in Italy before moving to Britain in 1996. "We made some false, fake explosives to frighten people, to stop them, because of the (Iraq) war basically," he said, in translated transcripts read out to jurors at Woolwich Crown Court. "There was a plastic (tub) and inside there was a type of flour and liquid mixed together to make it seem like explosive. It wasn't real," Osman added, describing the contents of rucksacks that he and some of the other accused carried on to the transit system.

Osman said Ibrahim and Omar had come with the idea, as they discussed the Iraq war and injustices against Muslims. "They had the idea. I said if this (hoax) could change things, I would do it," he said. When asked what things, he replied: "Change the war, the violence."
Link


Britain
Jury watches footage from London 7/7 bombings
2007-02-21
A jury at the trial of six men accused of attempting to detonate bombs on London's transit system were shown a video Tuesday of one of the suspects fleeing the capital dressed in a burqa.
Yassin Omar was captured on closed circuit television disguised in the traditional Muslim woman's dress.
Yassin Omar was captured on closed circuit television at London's Golders Green bus station and later at Digbeth coach station in Birmingham, 160 kilometers miles north of London, disguised in the traditional Muslim woman's dress.

The six men were arrested after alleged attacks on July 21, two weeks after four suicide bombers killed 52 people on the transit system. Omar and the other five defendants - Muktar Said Ibrahim, 29; Adel Yahya, 24; Manfu Asiedu, 33; Hussain Osman, 28; and Ramzi Mohamed, 25 - have all denied charges of conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to cause explosions likely to endanger life.
Link


Britain
Alleged bomber likened to Jesus
2007-01-27
A WITNESS told a British court overnight how an alleged terrorist looked like "Jesus nailed to the cross" after his bomb failed to properly detonate on a crowded underground train in London. The testimony came at the trial of six Muslim suspects accused over the failed suicide bombings on July 21, 2005, exactly two weeks after multiple suicide attacks left 56 people dead in the British capital.

Passenger Abisha Moyo, speaking as the court discussed the case of Hussain Osman, 28, said she heard a bang and then saw a man falling on to his back on top of a rucksack in the carriage. "He was in a position like Jesus when nailed to the cross, with his arms out to the sides," she said.

Osman and five others - Ramzi Mohammed, 25, Manfo Kwaku Asiedu, 33, Yassin Omar, 26, Muktar Said Ibrahim, 29, and Adel Yahya, 24 - deny charges of conspiracy to murder and to cause explosions likely to endanger life. Their trial at the top security Woolwich Crown Court in southeast London is one of Britain's highest profile cases in years and is expected to last four months. In other testimony, a retired nurse told the court how the alleged terrorist fled through her home following the failed attack, telling her "I'm just passing through."

Prosecutors said Osman climbed over a garden wall of Lola Henry's home, which backs onto the underground railway track, entered through their dining room window and exited their front door. Ms Henry recalled that she heard the noise of "someone running from my dining room area to the hall towards the front door before seeing the man identified by police as Osman. "The man said 'I won't hurt you, I'm just passing through' or words similar to that. He then opened the front door and went out," Henry said in a statement.

Another passenger, Eunice Olwa, said she saw the man squeeze himself between two train carriages and then jump down on to the track and walk away calmly. "It was like he was strolling in the park," she said.
Link


Britain
Bomber's target was baby in a pushchair
2007-01-16
One of the 21/7 bombers pinpointed a mother with her baby in a pushchair to become the principal target of his suicide explosion, Woolwich Crown Court heard.

Ramzi Mohammed was the Oval bomber, the jury was told. Seeing the young mother, he turned his back with the bomb in his rucksack over his shoulders so it faced her and detonated the charge. None of the bombs successfully detonated because the bombers had failed to get a sufficiently high concentration of hydrogen peroxide in the charge.

Mohammed and another defendant, Muktar Ibrahim, were arrested at a flat in Delgarno Gardens, west London, two days later. Hussain Osman, who had travelled to Brighton in the wake of the attempted attacks, returned to London and caught a train from Waterloo to Paris, the court was told. He then travelled to Rome, where he was arrested on 29 July.

The prosecution alleged that Manfo Asiedu was supposed to be another bomber, but he "lost his nerve at the last moment". Instead he dumped his bomb in a wooded area in Little Wormwood Scrubs, where it was found two days later, the jury was told. Yassin Omar was arrested on 27 July after fleeing London disguised in a burka, the court heard.

The conspiracy back in Britain only started after Ibrahim had returned from Pakistan in March.
Nigel Sweeney, prosecuting, told the jury that Mohammed had written a suicide note which was torn up after his arrest. A suicide video was later found by police at Mohammed's home. One note was found in pieces when he was arrested and a "perfected version", with his fingerprints, was discovered at the home of a friend.

The jury heard that Ibrahim had been trained for jihad in the Sudan in 2003 and had also travelled to Pakistan the following year "to take part in jihad or to train for it".

A search of the homes of Yahya and Osman revealed a mass of extremist Muslim material including home-made films with images of beheadings and terrorist atrocities including 9/11. The conspiracy back in Britain only started after Ibrahim had returned from Pakistan in March.
Link


Europe
Italian court issues arrest warrant for CIA agents
2005-12-24
F*&kers - we need to rethink our aliances - Italian and Spanish prosecutors need to rethink their position in this world...
An Italian court yesterday issued a Europe-wide arrest warrant for 22 CIA agents accused of kidnapping an Egyptian cleric from Milan and flying him to Egypt, where he says he was tortured.

The move raises the stakes in the dispute between Europe and America over the CIA's controversial policy of "extraordinary rendition".

It means that police forces in Britain and the 24 other members of the EU would be legally obliged to arrest any of the suspects, who would be sent back to Italy under a fast-track system adopted as a counter-terrorist measure after the September 11 attacks.

The same procedure was used to return Hussain Osman, one of the alleged would-be suicide bombers in London on July 21, after he was tracked down to Italy.

The Italian prosecutor, Armando Spataro, said he had also asked Interpol to try to detain the CIA agents anywhere in the world.

Magistrates in Milan believe that a CIA team abducted Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, otherwise known as Abu Omar, off a Milan street as he made his way to a mosque in February 2003.

The wanted men include the alleged head of the CIA Milan sub-station, identified as Robert Seldon Lady, who retired to a villa in northern Italy but slipped out of the country before arrest warrants were issued in July.

Prosecutors issued the warrants in apparent frustration with the justice minister, Roberto Castelli, who appears to have been stalling on their demand that the Italian government request their extradition from America.

Link


Britain
Bomb suspect fights extradition
2005-10-14
Lawyers for an Algerian man, wanted in connection with a series of Paris train bombings in 1995, say new moves to extradite him are "legally flawed". Rachid Ramda, the UK's longest-serving extradition prisoner, is challenging a Home Office ruling he must be removed. Mr Ramda is accused of conspiring in an explosion at Paris Metro station which killed eight people and of organising and financing several other bombings. The 10-year extradition battle has caused anger in France.

Mr Ramda, 35, faces 23 charges of financing and organising a bombing campaign in France between August and November 1995. On a separate extradition request, he is accused of being a conspirator in the bombing of the Saint Michel Metro station on 25 July 1995, in which eight people were killed and 87 injured. He is also believed to be a financier of Algeria's outlawed Armed Islamic Group (GIA). The GIA, which fights the government in Algeria, is thought to be responsible for the 1995 bombing campaign.

In April, Home Secretary Charles Clarke made a fresh extradition order on the basis that Mr Ramda, who is being held at London's Belmarsh prison, would receive a fair trial. But on Friday, Mr Ramda's QC Edward Fitzgerald told two High Court judges Mr Clarke's decision was "legally flawed" and that "bad faith" had been shown by the French government.
In 2002, two High Court judges quashed an extradition order, signed by the then Home Secretary David Blunkett, and ordered the case be reconsidered. Then the judges had expressed concern that evidence against Mr Ramda came from co-defendant Boualem Bensaid, said by his lawyers to have been tortured during interrogation while in French custody.

In the latest hearing, Mr Fitzgerald told Lord Justice Keen and Mr Justice Poole they should quash the new extradition order because Mr Clarke was wrong to conclude the defendant could raise the issue of Bensaid's treatment in his own trial. The lawyer also said Mr Clarke had failed to consider whether there was a real risk Mr Ramda himself would suffer inhuman treatment if extradited, which would be in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights.

In all, there have been nine separate legal proceedings to extradite Mr Ramda. A woman who was seriously injured in the French bombings has spoken of her frustration at the delay. Francoise Rudetzki contrasted the case with the UK request for the extradition of 21 July London bombing suspect Hussain Osman who was returned from Italy at the end of September. "What would the British think 10 years from now if he was still in Italy?" she asked recently.

Supporters of a campaign to block Mr Ramda's extradition say he could eventually deported from France to Algeria where, they claim, he could face execution.
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