Arabia |
Defendant says didn't fund Iraq insurgency |
2011-07-21 |
JEDDAH: The prime suspect among the 16 defendants facing trial in a special court in Jeddah for supporting terror activities said Wednesday charges made against him were false. On the second day of the trial, the judge read out the incriminating portions of a confession by a defendant identified only as No. 12 who accused the primary defendant of hosting in 2002 Iraqi extremist and opposition members of unnamed Arab countries in a type of informal gentleman's meeting called a diwaniah. No. 12 identified the Iraqis were affiliated with Al-Jaish Al-Islami and that during the meeting pamphlets extolling the terrorist group were distributed. Replying to the charge, the defendant, identified as No. 1, told the judge that people from different walks of life and countries used to meet at his house and discuss diverse topics. The topics were sometimes political, just as newspapers discuss different issues. He added that the participants were mainly his friends and their visits were legal and not secretive. No. 1 also denied that anyone attending these meetings were militants and that no incendiary pamphlets were distributed at these meetings. No. 12 accused No. 1 of accepting cash donations to fund terrorism activities, specifically accepting cash from a woman working as a doctor at an unnamed university hospital and another doctor working in Jeddah's Al-Nahda district. No. 1 also appeared on local television as an expert on relief activities as part of his ruse to take charitable contributions and use them for terrorism activities, according to No. 12's confession. No. 1 denied taking money from any woman doctor, but said that he used to send No. 12 to collect donations for approved relief operations in Iraq. No. 1 also claimed he received letters of thanks from former high-ranking government officials for his work on raising charity for relief campaigns. No. 12 also reportedly claimed in the confession that he accompanied No. 1 to a shop on Jeddah's Tahliah St. while No. 1 wore a mask. According to the confession, No. 1 told No.12 that he was wearing a mask because he wanted to collect a donation at a shopping center but he didn't want the donor to recognize him. No. 12 then said, according to the confession, that he noticed No. 1's wife at the shopping center. No. 1 responded to this allegation by saying that indeed he went to the shopping center wearing a mask, but that it was a joke and that his wife was indeed present in a shop but she didn't have the money to pay for a transaction. No. 1 also denied another allegation in No. 12's confession that he gave cash to Rafi Al-Isawi, a manager of a hospital in Falujah, Iraq, and that he told the manager to spend the money any way he deemed fit. He also claimed that all of his charity activities were reported to the Interior Ministry. Also on Wednesday, the presiding judge in the hearing expelled two reporters, one of them a television reporter, from the court at the request of No. 1, who said the two reporters concocted false claims against him. |
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Iraq |
hamas-iraq sez: al-qaeda in iraq subservient to iran, iran more dangerous than the USA |
2008-04-08 |
Hamas-Iraq: Al-Qaeda in Iraq is Subservient to Iran; 'The U.S. is Our Main Enemy, But a More Dangerous Enemy is Iran' In a March 26, 2008 interview with the Qatari daily Al-'Arab, the spokesman for the Iraqi Sunni jihad organization Hamas-Iraq, Ahmad Salah Al-Din, accused Al-Qaeda in Iraq of regarding most Iraqi resistance factions as its main enemy, of subservience to Iran, and of receiving from it weapons, funds, training, and medical care for its wounded. Salah Al-Din added that in the past year Al-Qaeda in Iraq had become considerably weaker and smaller. The following are excerpts from the Al-'Arab article on the interview: Al-Qaeda in Iraq Has Its Own Agenda, Which Transcends the Borders of Iraq "Regarding the reasons for the confrontation with Al-Qaeda, Salah Al-Din stated: 'We do not regard Al-Qaeda [in Iraq] as a resistance organization, since it has its own agenda which transcends the borders of Iraq. This has been clear since Abu-Mus'ab Al-Zarqawi vowed allegiance to Osama bin Laden because after the occupation of Iraq, Al-Tawhid Wal-Jihad,(1) which was under Al-Zarqawi's command, was close to all Iraqi resistance factions and even planned to join forces with Al-Jaish Al-Islami. However, after Al-Zarqawi's vow of allegiance to bin Laden was publicly announced, things changed considerably: Al-Qaeda began openly spreading its ideas, goals, and hatred, and accusing of heresy anybody who took part in the political process, including Sunni Arab parties. "'Following Al-Zarqawi's assassination, Al-Qaeda intensified its aggression against Iraq's resistance factions, until they became its primary [targets]. A confrontation ensued between [Al-Qaeda] and most of the Iraqi resistance factions, including the Thawrat Al-'Ishrin brigades after Al-Qaeda had the audacity to murder Hareth Al-Dhari, the nephew of Sheikh Hareth Al-Dhari, secretary-general of the Council of Muslim Clerics in Iraq.'" The Real Al-Qaeda Commander [in Iraq] is Abu Ayub Al-Masri "Salah Al-Din accused Al-Qaeda of being subservient to Iran, [claiming] that they had [extensive] evidence to that effect. He said: 'We found Iranian [currency], toman, at an Al-Qaeda headquarters that we uncovered. We have also captured Iranian weapons, not to mention audio and video recordings containing announcements by Al-Qaeda fighters that they had received training in Iranian military camps and that Al-Qaeda wounded were being transported to Iran for medical treatment.' "Salah Al-Din claimed that Al-Qaeda's real commander [in Iraq] was Abu Ayub Al-Masri, and that [Abu 'Omar] Al-Baghdadi(2) was an Iraqi figure to whom many [words and deeds] are attributed solely to create the impression that [Al-Qaeda is a genuinely] Iraqi organization. He said that [Abu Ayub] Al-Masri had been rescued from arrest by an Arab intelligence apparatus using a diplomatic vehicle belonging to the Iranian Embassy... Salah Al-Din explained that as of late, Al-Qaeda in Iraq had considerably diminished in size so much so that today it can be said to constitute 15 percent of what it was a year ago, [and that therefore, even] if Al-Qaeda has begun launching suicide operations, these [operations] are not proof of its strength...'" Iran Wants to Eradicate Our Beliefs and to Change the Demography of the Sunni Regions, Particularly Baghdad "[In conclusion,] Salah Al-Din stated, in the name of Hamas-Iraq: 'The U.S. is our main enemy, but a more dangerous enemy is Iran. The U.S. wants [our] oil, and possibly it wants to establish military bases [on our soil], or to remain [in Iraq] for many years to come while Iran wants to rule, [and] to eradicate and change [our] beliefs and ideas, [and] aspires to alter the demography of the Sunni regions, particularly Baghdad.'"(3) Endnotes: (1) Al-Tawhid Wal-Jihad was the name of Al-Qaeda in Iraq before it vowed allegiance to bin Laden. (2) Al-Baghdadi is the "Emir of the Islamic State of Iraq." (3) Al-'Arab (Qatar), March 26, 2008. |
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Iraq | |
Iraqi forces capture terrorist cell leader | |
2007-02-25 | |
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The terrorists are responsible for killing a large number of civilians, Iraqi and coalition forces, it added. Brigadier Abdulkareem Khalaf, director of the Interior Ministry's national command center, said earlier today a key terrorist in so-called Al-Jaish Al-Islami (Islamic Army) organization was captured in northern Baghdad. Iraqi rapid reaction forces, backed by American troops, raided a base used by Al-Jaish Al-Islami and killed scores of terrorists and captured their leader Saad Khalifa. | |
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