Jamal Ahmidan | Jamal Ahmidan | Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group | Europe | 20040401 | |||||
Jamal Ahmidan | Takfir wal Hijra | Europe | 20040523 | Link | |||||
Jamal Ahmidan | al-Qaeda in Europe | Europe | Deceased | 20050830 | |||||
Jamal Ahmidan | Moroccan Islamist Combatant Group | Europe | 20040401 | ||||||
El Chino | Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group | Europe | Moroccan | Arrested | Tough Guy | 20040401 | Link | ||
Alias of Jamal Ahmidan, involved in Madrid bombings. |
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Spain braced for verdicts in 3/11 train bombings | ||||||
2007-10-31 | ||||||
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The eight main defendants could serve 40 years, the longest possible in Spain regardless of the sentence actually passed. Other alleged conspirators face between four and 27 years. All of the accused have pleaded not guilty.
The figure who drew most attention at the trial was Rabei Osman, said to be the link between the Madrid bombers and other Islamist terrorist groups. Mr Osman, also known as the Egyptian, was arrested in Milan in June 2004 after allegedly saying in wiretapped conversations that he planned the train bombings. Mr Osman claims he has been mistranslated, and condemned the attacks during the trial.
Rogelio Alonso, a lecturer in politics and terrorism at the King Juan Carlos university, said he believed the trial had shown that "it is possible to fight this type of [Islamist] terrorism through the courts". He also said the investigation had uncovered a link between the Madrid suspects and the wider world of al-Qaida.
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Madrid bombers widow tells of his last seconds |
2007-03-09 |
The widow of one of the Madrid bombers told on Thursday of her husbands last call before he blew himself with six other terrorists. In an interview with the Spanish daily El Pais, Rosa told how Jamal Ahmidan, known as The Chinese, called her from a flat where he was surrounded by police. The group of Islamic radicals said to have planted the train bombs were staying in a flat near Madrid when they were surrounded weeks after the train bombings in the Spanish capital. They blew themselves up rather than be taken alive, killing a police officer in the process. Rosa told the paper: He told me it was better to die, that he was not going to give himself up. I heard a lot of praying and chanting. He didnt speak much with me. When he spoke to his mother the place blew up. In the first interview given since the bombings in March 2004, Rosa - who is not linked to the attacks claimed the leader of the group was Serhane, known as The Tunisian. She said her husband was an operative but added: I am sure that he didnt want to dirty his hands and left others to plant the bombs. Rosa is a protected witness for the prosecution in the trial of 29 people who are accused of being involved in the attacks which killed 191 people and injured more than 1,800. She said she received a call from her husband hours after the attacks. He told me he was going to France. I asked him How are you going to disappear like this? Anyone could think that it is you, she said. He answered How? He remained silent then put down the phone. The trial continues. |
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Judge asks Spain to declassify papers in bomb trial |
2007-02-21 |
A Spanish court hearing the Madrid train bomb trial asked the government on Monday to declassify papers in which one of the accused allegedly mentions contacts between a suspect and Basque separatist group ETA. When the bombs ripped through commuter trains on March 11, 2004, killing 191 people, the then-ruling conservative Popular Party blamed the blasts on ETA before a battery of evidence pinned the blame on a group of Islamist militants. Prosecutors have ruled out any link between the Islamists and ETA, which has killed more than 800 people in a four-decade fight for independence for the Basque Country in northern Spain and southwest France. However, some rightwing media and politicians still insist ETA had a role in the train bombings. The lead judge in the case, Javier Gomez Bermudez, asked the government to release documents from the national intelligence centre about a meeting agents had with Jose Emilio Suarez Trashorras, accused of supplying the bombers with dynamite. In that meeting, Trashorras said Jamal Ahmidan, who prosecutors say was one of the main people behind the bombs, had been in contact with various ETA prisoners, court sources said. Trashorras, a former miner, is accused of selling dynamite to Ahmidan, known as "El Chino" (The Chinaman) and faces the heftiest charges in the case, including terrorist murders. Ahmidan was one of seven suspects who blew themselves up in an apartment block weeks after the train bombings. Earlier this month, the government agreed to hand a judge papers about secret CIA flights that flew via Spain to transport terrorism suspects to third countries where investigators say they may have faced torture or abuse. When it declassified the papers on the "rendition" flights, the government said the judge should use the papers only for the investigation and treat the data with maximum protection, suggesting the information would not be made public. |
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29 indicted in connection with 3/11 |
2006-04-12 |
So much for the "no al-Qaeda link" that was being touted awhile back ... A Spanish judge indicted 29 people on Tuesday in connection with the Madrid train bombings two years ago, suggesting that the group attacked Spain for its support of the American-led invasion of Iraq and for its increasingly aggressive police investigations of Islamic radical groups. The indictment, part of a long-awaited report about the attacks running nearly 1,500 pages, did not assert directly that the plotters had been motivated by anger at the policies of Spain's government. But the judge who wrote the report, Juan del Olmo, noted that the timing of the attacks, March 11, was just three days before Spain's general election. José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero of the Socialist Party won that election in a surprise victory and fulfilled his campaign pledge to withdraw Spanish troops immediately after taking office in April. Five of the men indicted Tuesday were charged with carrying out or conspiring to carry out the attacks, done with 10 strategically placed bombs that exploded on four commuter trains, killing 191 people and wounding about 1,800. A sixth man was accused of acting as a "necessary collaborator," while the rest were charged with belonging to or aiding a terrorist group, or contributing to the attacks through support roles like providing explosives or falsifying documents. The trial is expected to begin next spring. Judge del Olmo's report largely summarized provisional findings he had made in filings over the past two years. It asserted that the cell that carried out the attacks was made up mostly of Moroccan radicals, several with ties to Al Qaeda and to the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group, a militant organization seeking to establish an Islamist state in Morocco. Spanish investigators have said that the cell came together in Spain initially under the guidance of a Syrian named Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas, also known as Abu Dahdah, who was convicted in September by a Spanish court for conspiring to commit the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States and for leading a Qaeda cell in Spain. He was sentenced to 27 years in prison. After Mr. Yarkas and several followers were arrested in 2001, investigators have said, the group reconstituted itself under the leadership of Sarhane ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, a former Tunisian graduate student in economics who in 2003 began calling for an attack on Spain in part because of its support of American policies toward Iraq. There is no indication in Judge del Olmo's report that Mr. Fakhet or Jamal Ahmidan, a Moroccan identified as the operational head of the cell, had any direct links to the top leadership of Al Qaeda. But in explaining the major influences on the group, Judge del Olmo cited a document posted on a Web site run by Global Islamic Media Front, a group widely seen as a front for Al Qaeda. The document, apparently posted in late 2003, called for attacks on Spain before the general elections in March, saying they would help drive a wedge between the Spanish public, which overwhelmingly opposed the invasion of Iraq, and the government of former Prime Minister José María Aznar, who supported the invasion and contributed troops. Judge del Olmo also suggested that the Madrid attacks were partly a response to a crackdown on Islamic radical groups by the Spanish police that began in the late 1990's. That crackdown, which included the arrest of Mr. Yarkas and the breakup of his cell in Madrid, disrupted a major logistical base for Islamic radicals in Europe, Spanish investigators say. |
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3/11 indictments to be issued soon |
2006-04-10 |
After more than two years of delays and rampant speculation about his findings, a Spanish judge is expected to issue indictments early this week in connection with the March 11, 2004, train bombings in Madrid that killed 191 people and wounded at least 1,000. The bombings, the deadliest terrorist attack in the history of Western Europe since the downing of a Pan American Airlines flight over Scotland in 1988, have led to the arrests of about 120 people and the provisional jailing of 24. It is not clear how many will be indicted. Local news reports estimate that the number of indictments will be between 30 and 40. The judge handling the case, Juan del Olmo, has shunned publicity throughout the investigation, hardly speaking with the press and keeping much of his work from public view. Still, the broad outlines of his conclusions are evident in several of his provisional court filings, which attribute the attacks to Islamic radicals, most of them Moroccans and many with ties to Al Qaeda. According to the filings, the group appears to have come together in Spain, initially under the guidance of a Syrian named Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas, also known as Abu Dahdah, who was convicted by a Spanish court in September of conspiring to commit the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States and of leading a cell of Al Qaeda in Spain. After Yarkas was arrested in 2001, leadership of the group eventually passed to a younger radical, a former Tunisian graduate student in economics named Sarhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, who in early 2003 began calling for an attack on Spain in part because of its support of American policies toward Iraq, the documents say. Fakhet and his co-leader, Jamal Ahmidan, the man who investigators have called the operational head of the cell, blew themselves up along with five other members of the group when their apartment near Madrid was surrounded by the Spanish police about three weeks after the train bombings. Investigators working with del Olmo say that practically all of the principal members of the group are now dead or in custody, and that they have unraveled most of what the group did in the days leading up to the attacks, largely through information gathered from phone records. What they have not established, at least not publicly, is the existence of a link between the group and the top leadership of Al Qaeda. Many investigators say that the typically horizontal structure of Islamic terrorist networks suggests that the group probably conceived and carried out the train bombings without any order or message from Osama bin Laden or his top lieutenants. Del Olmo has been publicly criticized by senior judges for the slow pace of his investigation, leading him to set his own deadline of April 10 for issuing the indictments. A court official said that the judge was likely to miss the deadline by a day, suggesting he would publish his findings on Tuesday rather than Monday. The trial is expected to begin in late summer or in early autumn. One person has been convicted so far, a minor identified by the initials G.M.V. who pleaded guilty in November 2004 to having helped provide the explosives used in the attacks. Del Olmo's investigation has been the subject of intense partisan maneuverings almost from the outset. Members of the center-right Popular Party, which was in power at the time of the attacks, continue to suggest that ETA, the militant Basque separatist group, was involved - a claim they made in the days immediately after the attacks. The governing Socialists call this reckless disregard for the facts, contending that the Popular Party is trying to fend off criticism that the attacks were a response from Muslim radicals to Spanish support for the American invasion of Iraq. While being careful not to directly blame the previous government for the attacks, saying that only terrorists are responsible for terrorism, the Socialists have argued that the policy of supporting the invasion of Iraq put Spain at greater risk of attack from Islamic militants. The police investigators have said repeatedly that there is no evidence indicating that ETA participated in the train bombings. |
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3/11 bombers planned further attacks |
2006-03-11 |
Almost two years to the day since al-Qaeda linked bombers killed 191 passengers and injured almost 1,000 in devastating train bombings the Spanish capital on 11 March, 2004, it has emerged that the bombers had planned to carry out further attacks in Spain, according to disclosures published on Friday in the Spanish daily, ABC. A particuarly disturbing relevation in the ABC report is that other terrorist attacks were planned on Spanish soil. Investigators reportedly found details of planned attacks by the Madrid cell on the computer of one of the bombing suspects, Jamal Ahmidan, known as 'the Chinaman'. Among the cell's possible future targets were an English school in Madrid, and the Avila and Toledo synagogues, ABC reported. Investigators found a kind of manual on how to organise a terrorist group that Ahmidan had downloaded onto his computer one week after the deadly attacks from an 'online al-Battar training camp' based in Saudi Arabia. The 'instructions' received by Ahmidan included how to form a terror command structure in a large city. The manual contains information on the composition of an al-Qaeda cell. This needs to be made up of five groups: the leadership, information and logistics staff, operatives who carry out attacks, and financial officers. Only the leadership of a cell can know the objective of an attacks, according to the manual. Just a few days after Ahmidan downloaded the manual, police found 12 kilogrammes of explosives near Toledo, on the tracks of the high-speed Madrid-Seville express train. Ahmidan and several other Madrid train bombing suspects blew themselves up in a flat in a Madrid suburb when police moved in to arrest them three weeks after the bombings. A police special operations officer was killed and 18 police officers were injured in the blast. The second anniversary of the Madrid train bombings will be marked in a low-key climate, with little pomp and ceremony - at the request of relations of the victims. More than 200 of the attacks still need medical assistance, and a further 264 need psychological help. On Friday night prime minister Jose Luis Zapatero and King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia will attend a memorial concert for victims of the Madrid attacks and the 7 July 2005 bombings of the British capital London's transport system that killed 54 and injured 700. No bombing suspect has yet stood trial. Judge Juan del Olmo is expected to present his first indictments in the complex investigation by 10 April: some 30 people out of 116 suspects, many of whom are Moroccan, are expected to be charged. Del Olmo and the National Court have been warned that unless the investigation is stepped up, some of the 25 defendants currently detained might have to be released from custody before any trial ends. Spain's 11th March Association of Terrorism Victims president, Pilar Manjon said on Thursday she was starting legal action against del Olmo. Manjon is angry that del Olmo has so far asked only 10 of the hundreds of victims of the deadly attacks to testify before him. |
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Intel officials say no link between 3/11, al-Qaeda |
2006-03-10 |
Color my skepticism here, just look at the description of the indictment. A two-year probe into the Madrid train bombings concludes the Islamic terrorists who carried out the blasts were homegrown radicals acting on their own rather than at the behest of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, two senior intelligence officials said. Spain still remains home to a web of radical Algerian, Moroccan and Syrian groups bent on carrying out attacks and aiding the insurgency against U.S. troops in Iraq a Spanish intelligence chief and a Western official intimately involved in counterterrorism measures in Spain told The Associated Press. The intelligence chief said there were no phone calls between the Madrid bombers and al-Qaeda and no money transfers. The Western official said the plotters had links to other Islamic radicals in Western Europe, but the plan was hatched and organized in Spain. "This was not an al-Qaeda operation," he said. "It was homegrown." Both men spoke on condition of anonymity, the first because Spanish security officials are not allowed to discuss details of an ongoing investigation and the second due to the sensitive nature of his job. The attack has been frequently described as al-Qaeda-linked since a man who identified himself as Abu Dujan al-Afghani and said he was al-Qaeda's "European military spokesman," claimed responsibility in a video released two days later. Ahead of Saturday's anniversary of the March 11, 2004 blasts which killed 191 people and wounded 1,500 victims' groups have been clamoring for more progress in the investigation. Gabriel Moris, whose 30-year-old son died in the bombings, said: "These past two years have done nothing to clear up what happened. My questions are simple: Who ordered the massacre? Who killed my son and the other innocent victims?" The intelligence official said authorities know more than they have revealed, including the suspected ideological and operational masterminds of the attack. "We haven't explained it well enough to the victims because we can't reveal judicial secrets," he said, adding the investigation is nearly complete. Authorities believe the ideological mastermind was Serhan Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, a Tunisian who blew himself up along with six other suspects when police surrounded their apartment three weeks after the bombings, and that Jamal Ahmidan, a Moroccan who also died that day, was the "military planner." Law enforcement had focused on another man, Allekema Lamari, as the head of the group. But the official said evidence, particularly from wiretapped phone conversations, indicated it was Ahmidan who gave the military orders. Lamari also died in the apartment blast in a Madrid suburb as authorities closed in. Some 116 people have been arrested in the bombings, and 24 remain jailed. At least three others Said Berraj, Mohammed Belhadj and Daoud Ouhane are sought by authorities, though all are believed to have fled Spain long ago. The intelligence official said the top planners are all either dead or in jail. While the plotters of the Madrid attack were likely motivated by bin Laden's October 2003 call for attacks on European countries that supported the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, there is no evidence they were in contact with the al-Qaeda leader's inner circle, the intelligence official said. Most of the plotters were Moroccan and Syrian immigrants, many with criminal records in Spain for drug trafficking and other crimes. They paid for explosives used in the attack with hashish. That is a far cry from the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States allegedly planned by al-Qaeda leaders like Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and Ramzi Binalshibh and funded directly by the terror network through international wire transfers and Islamic banking schemes. Paul Wilkinson, chairman of the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, said the model used in Madrid, and likely for the July 7 London transport bombings fits in well with al-Qaeda's business plan. "Al-Qaeda is not and never was a topdown organization that did everything in terms of attacks around the world. They have a key role in ideological terms ... but they rely on local cells and those that are inspired to carry out these attacks," he said. After the fact, bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri are happy to claim responsibility because they recognize the carnage as inspired by their movement. Still, Wilkinson cautioned that just because no direct link has been established between the Madrid plotters and al-Qaeda, it doesn't mean none exists. "If security officials knew everything that was going on, we would have caught Osama bin Laden by now," he said. Both the Spanish intelligence chief and the Western official said there is reason for concern despite the lack of a direct al-Qaeda connection. "There were a lot of moving parts to the March 11 plot, but we were still not able to detect it, and that is scary because a similar thing could happen again," said the Western counterterrorism official. "Since March 11, there have been plans for other significant attacks that the Spanish have disrupted." Those plans include a scheme in late 2004 to bomb buildings in Barcelona, including the 1992 Olympic village and office towers known as the city's World Trade Center complex. Police also thwarted a 2004 plot by Moroccan and Algerian militants to level Madrid's National Court a hub for anti-terror investigations with a 1,100-pound truck bomb. And agents specializing in Islamic terrorism have arrested dozens of suspects all allegedly working to recruit potential suicide bombers for the Iraq insurgency. At least two Spanish citizens including March 11 suspect Mohammed Afalah are believed to have blown themselves up in Iraq, and an investigation by the respected El Pais daily revealed some 80 others have traveled to the country in recent months intending to do the same. The intelligence official said the March 11 attacks were a wakeup call, and authorities are much better prepared now to stop Islamic terrorism. But he said the bombings show how easy it is for those bent on terrorism to carry out attacks. He said authorities believe the Madrid bombers learned how to construct the bombs all connected to Mitsubishi Trium T110 mobile phones from Internet sites linked to radical Islamic groups. The devices were similar to ones used in the 2002 Bali bombing, he said, evidence that militants in both countries got information on the same radical websites. Spanish authorities were monitoring several of the bombers in the months before the attack and actually stopped Ahmidan's car on a highway in late February, unaware he was leading a caravan of other terrorists transporting the explosives used in the blasts. The intelligence official said authorities had never imagined a group of petty drug traffickers were capable of planning such a massive attack. "Had we been told a day before (the bombing) that this is what was going on, we would have dismissed it," he said. |
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'Kidnappers' linked to Madrid bombing suspect |
2005-08-30 |
![]() Among the detainees are two brothers and a cousin of Jamal Ahmidan, one of seven suspects in the 11 March train bombings who blew themselves up as police prepared to storm their apartment near Madrid. The kidnapping ring was made up of at least seven people - four Moroccans, one Dutchman, a Palestinian and a Spaniard. The police operation led to the release of a Moroccan man kidnapped four days ago in a downtown Madrid residence. Family members of the victim had received telephone calls following the kidnapping demanding payment of a ransom and had reported the crime to police. On Saturday, three members of the ring were arrested when they went to meet with relatives of the victim concerning the ransom. They were Spaniard Jose Carlos S.D., Dutchman Adil A. and Moroccan Mustafa Ahmidan. Adil A., a cousin of Ahmidan's who was in Spain illegally, has a record of violent robberies, while Mustafa Ahmidan - Jamal Ahmidan's brother - had been arrested previously for collaborating with a terrorist group and for domestic violence. Mustafa Ahmidan also was questioned last year in connection with the 11 March rail bombings, which killed nearly 200 people. He was subsequently released. Other suspects in the Madrid bombings have also mentioned Mustafa Ahmidan's name in their statements to investigators. Also on Saturday, officers entered the home where the kidnap victim was being held, freed him and arrested the two gang members holding him captive, a Moroccan and a Palestinian. During a search of the premises, police found shackles and a fake pistol. The operation was completed on Monday with the arrest of two other members of the ring, including another of Jamal Ahmidan's brothers. |
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3/11 Bombers wanted to swing election to Zappy |
2005-07-16 |
via Barcepundit. His Spanish translation is better than mine would be AS IF THERE WAS still any doubt at this point, the Spanish press reports today on a document found in the computer of one of the key perpetrators of the March 11 terrorist attacks in Madrid (link in Spanish, my translation): A document found in the personal computer of Jamal Ahmidan, "The Chinese", undersigned by the Abu Hafs al Masri brigades and dated March 15, 2004 declares that the March 11 perpetrators intented to remove [Aznar's] Popular Party from the government. The document was recently found by police, according to the Cope radio network who has seen it. It says: "those who were suprised for our quick claim of responsibility in the battle of Madrid, let them know that there were other circumstances. In the case of Madrid, the time factor was very important in order to put an end to the government of Aznar the ignoble. The night of March 11, the Abu Hafs al Masri brigades sent the London daily 'al Hayat' a statement claiming responsibility for what they called the "operation trains of death". The same group claimed responsibility last July 9 of the terror attacks in London. "Let all know that we're a part of the so-called world order. We change states, we destroy others with Allah's help and even decide the future of the world's economy. We won't accept being mere passive agents in this world", the text found in Jamal Ahmidan's computer, one of the main perpetrators of the March 11 cells and who blew himself up in Leganes a few days later together with other co-participants, warns. Apparently, this statement was a response to intelligence services who questioned the authenticity of the first claim of responsibility sent by the brigades only a few hours after the Atocha [station] attacks. The text also contains strong criticism of Western leaders, particularly [Spain's] former Primer Minister Jose Maria Aznar, described as the "tail of the American tyrants". ABC (the Madrid newspaper, not the American or Australian TV network) reports further (also in Spanish) and reminds a very telling detail: when he was brought before a judge after the first 72 hours in isolation (permitted by Spanish anti-terror legislation), the first thing asked by Jamal Zougam, another of the key suspects of March 11, was: "Who won the election?". |
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Islamic extremist 'who bought bombs' arrested | ||
2005-04-13 | ||
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Teenager is first on trial for Madrid massacre | ||
2004-11-15 | ||
Heavily EFL. The first trial of a suspect implicated in the 11 March train bombings in Madrid opens on Tuesday with a 16-year-old in the dock facing up to eight years in detention for allegedly handling and helping to transport the explosives used in the attack. He will appear in court hidden by a screen at the trial, set to last three days and at which cameramen and photographers will be banned, in line with all hearings of minors. Nicknamed El Gitanillo ("Little Gypsy") he is one of 19 suspects held on suspicion of involvement in the attacks. The majority are Moroccan nationals.
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Spain IDs Alleged Ringleader in Bombing | |
2004-10-16 | |
One of the alleged ringleaders of the March 11 train bombings in Madrid was identified Friday as one of seven suspects who blew themselves up during a police raid on their apartment. Forensic tests confirmed that Allekema Lamari, an Algerian who Spanish authorities described as "the emir of the train bombings," was among the dead, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. Police searching for suspects in the train bombings raided the apartment in the Madrid district of Leganes on April 3. All seven people inside blew themselves up, killing one police officer and wounding 15 other policemen. Lamari's was the last of the bodies to be identified. Spanish authorities identified the body using saliva samples taken from Lamari's parents Mohammed and Teldja Lamari, the statement added. The ministry described Lamiri as one of the ringleaders. In 1997, he was arrested by Spanish authorities and convicted of belonging to an Algerian extremist group. He was sentenced to 14 years in prison, but was released in 2002 when his sentence was reduced. He became a prime suspect of the March 11 bombings when his fingerprints were found on a book of Quranic verses found at the Leganes apartment during the investigations led by the National Court. DNA tests on clothes in car that had been used by the alleged bombers also led police to suspect Lamari. The other suspected terrorists killed in the April suicide blast were identified as: Tunisian Serhane Ben Abdelmajid, Moroccans Jamal Ahmidan, Asri Rifaat, Abdennabi Kounjaa, and Rachid Akcha and Oulad Akcha, brothers who were also from Morocco. Officials say several of the seven were ringleaders of the attack.
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