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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Defence witnesses testify in conspiracy trial
2005-12-06
Three defence witnesses testified at the State Security Court (SSC) on Monday in the case of 17 men charged with plotting attacks against security officers and US forces training Iraqi troops in the Kingdom. The defendants, including a Syrian, have been formally charged with conspiracy to carry out terrorist attacks against Jordanian anti-terrorism officers and US forces training Iraqi troops in Jordan. Other charges levelled against the 17 men by the military prosecution include carrying out and plotting activity aimed at undermining Jordan's relations with another country. The prosecution has also charged the defendants with recruiting people to fight in Iraq and raising funds for Jordanian fugitive Abu Mussab Zarqawi.

The suspects pleaded not guilty to the charges during their opening trial in September. The witnesses all testified to meeting two of the defendants, Mufid and Amar, while praying in a Jerash mosque. They said the defendants never asked them for donations for fighters in Iraq and also confirmed that the two defendants had never asked them to fight in Iraq. At the end of the 30-minute session, the defence team asked the court for time to prepare their defence and summon more witnesses.

In a second trial at the SSC on Monday, Muamar Ahmad Jugheiber's lawyer asked the court for permission to summon seven witnesses to testify in the case. Jugheiber is standing trial along with Zarqawi on charges of plotting an attack against the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad in 2003. The Aug. 7 attack left 17 people dead, including one Jordanian and five Iraqi policemen, and injured dozens. Jugheiber and Zarqawi are charged with plotting subversive acts that led to the death of individuals.

Jugheiber's attorney Fathi Daradkeh informed the court that he plans to summon two prison inmates, a former General Intelligence Department officer, two engineers and a journalist. He also requested permission to summon the Jordanian envoy to Baghdad at the time of the bombing. Presiding Judge Fawaz Bqour agreed to Daradkeh's request with the exception of the Jordanian envoy. “The court will make a decision on this request at a later stage in the trial,” Bqour said.

Jugheiber, who met Zarqawi in Iraq in 2002, pledged allegiance to him and embraced takfiri thoughts (labelling people as apostates), according to the prosecution charge sheet. The two plotted to attack foreigners residing in the Kingdom and Jordanian “interests in Iraq, including the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad,” the charge sheet said. “Upon Zarqawi's instructions, Jugheiber monitored the embassy for three days then helped fill the car that was used in the attack with explosives." The SSC adjourned the trial until next Monday. Jugheiber and Zarqawi were sentenced to death in absentia by the SSC in April 2004 for plotting the assassination of US diplomat Laurance Foley outside his Amman home on Oct. 28, 2002. Jugheiber was arrested in Iraq in May 2004 by US forces and handed over to the Jordanian authorities. He is currently being retried in the Foley case on charges of subversive acts that led to the death of an individual.
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Iraq-Jordan
Jugheiber pleads not guilty to charges of plotting embassy attack
2005-07-05
A Jordanian man accused of plotting an attack against the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad in August 2003, pleaded not guilty to the charges at the State Security Court (SSC) on Monday. Muamar Ahmad Jugheiber is charged, along with fugitive Abu Mussab Zarqawi, with plotting subversive acts that led to the death of individuals. The Aug. 7 attack left 17 people dead, including, five Iraqi policemen, and dozens more injured, and caused financial losses estimated at JD181,126, according to the charge sheet.

During Monday's session, Jugheiber's defence lawyer Fathi Daradkeh informed the court that his client was detained for six months for interrogation purposes by the security forces. “My client's long detention period is in violation of his rights and the law and I hope the court will take this into consideration,” Daradkeh told the tribunal.

Presiding Judge Fawaz Bqour said the court would consider the defence's charges when it issues a verdict in the case. Judge Bqour adjourned the session until July 11 to start hearing the prosecution witnesses. Jugheiber and Zarqawi were sentenced to death in absentia by the SSC in April 2004 for plotting the assassination of US diplomat Laurance Foley outside his Amman home on Oct. 28, 2002. Jugheiber was arrested in Iraq in May 2004 by US forces and handed over to the Jordanian authorities. He is currently standing trial in the Foley case on charges of subversive acts which led to the death of an individual.
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Iraq-Jordan
Soddy accused of planning attack in Jordan
2005-06-09
A Saudi citizen pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges of attempting to carry out a suicide attack in December 2004 on oil tankers at the Karameh border post. Fahd Noman al-Fahiqi, 24, maintained his innocence before Jordan's State Security Court on three counts of conspiracy to carry out an attack and possession and transport of explosives for use in an illicit operation, according to statements from the prosecution.

Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordnian-born head of al-Qaida in Iraq, and Dirar Ismael Mahmud Abu Audeh, also known as Abu Abdel Rahman al-Afghani, are being tried in absentia on the same charges. Fahiqi allegedly crossed the Iraqi border in a car laden with explosives and headed toward several oil tankers but was unable to accomplish his mission due to "technical problems." Authorities arrested Fahiqi shortly afterward when they discovered explosives in his car, read the charge report.

Fahiqi studied at Imam University in Saudi Arabia where he became acquainted with several people who had embraced takfiri thoughts, a policy of killing anybody considered an infidel. The prosecution claims Fahiqi and others infiltrated Iraq from the Saudi border where they met up with Zarqawi in August 2004. Zarqawi encouraged them to join mujahedin groups. The defendant became a suicide bomber after receiving weapons training in Iraq and instruction on the benefits of martyrdom, read the report.

The targeted oil tankers and trucks transported goods from the Karameh border into Iraq. The prosecution maintains Zarqawi instructed the men to launch suicide attacks using cars laden with explosives. Presiding Judge Fawaz Bqour adjourned the trial until next Monday to hear the case for the prosecution.
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