Ramzi Mohammed | Ramzi Mohammed | al-Qaeda in Europe | Britain | 20050812 | ||||
Ramzi Mohammed Abdullah Binalshibh | Ramzi Mohammed Abdullah Binalshibh | al-Qaeda | Europe | 20031114 |
Britain |
Somali radicals 'importing terror to UK' |
2009-02-16 |
![]() An investigation for Channel 4 News, to be broadcast tonight, also reveals that a suicide bomber who grew up in Ealing is thought to have blown himself up in an attack in Somalia that killed more than 20 soldiers. The incident is the first reported case involving a Somali based in Britain and will add to pressure on Scotland Yard and the Home Office to tackle the problem within the Somali community, which, at about 250,000 people, is the biggest in Europe. Pakistan rightly gets the most attention in terms of external threats, a senior counter-terrorism source said. But we believe we should focus more on the Horn of Africa and Somalia in particular. Two years ago Ethiopian forces occupied parts of Somalia after ousting the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) from the capital, Mogadishu the latest chapter in a long history of conflict between the two countries. The Ethiopians withdrew last month as part of a peace deal agreed between the Government and moderate Islamists, leaving African Union peacekeepers and Somali soldiers although many believe that they will not be able to keep advancing extremists at bay. The hardline Islamist militia al-Shabaab, treated as a terrorist organisation by the US, has taken advantage of Ethiopia's withdrawal to boost its control of the south. More than 16,000 people have been reported killed in the past two years of fighting. Peter Neumann, a terrorism expert who runs the Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at King's College London, told Channel 4 News: The numbers I hear [going from Britain to Somalia] are 50, 60 or 70, but in reality we don't know. You don't need big numbers for terrorism. Somalia will never become another Pakistan, but that does not mean it is not a threat. Most Somalis in Britain entered the country as asylum-seekers within the past 20 years. They include Yasin Omar and Ramzi Mohammed, two of the four men convicted of the botched bombing of the London Underground on July 21, 2005. An audio message from Osama bin Laden last month urged Muslims to send money or go to fight themselves in Somalia. Such references are usually a good indicator, Dr Neumann said. The place is seen as an opportunity, from a jihadist point of view. Some Somali leaders say their community already associated with gang and knife crime is being unfairly targeted. But outside a West London mosque last week, several Somalis were adamant that they were entitled to fight for their homeland. If American troops can go from Arizona to Iraq then someone can leave this area and go to Somalia, one said. The British Somali who became a suicide bomber had abandoned a business studies course at Oxford Brookes University (Jonathan Rugman writes). The 21-year-old from Ealing, West London, reportedly blew himself up at a checkpoint in the southern Somali town of Baidoa in October 2007 after crossing into Somalia by foot from Kenya. News reports at the time said that the Somali Prime Minister was staying at a nearby hotel but escaped. Somali jihadist websites claimed that more than 20 Ethiopian soldiers were killed. The bomber was a member of al-Shabaab The Youth militia, which is fighting to impose Islamic law. Its brutal tactics include decapitating alleged spies with knives. Six aid workers were reportedly killed by the group last December. It is not clear whether Britain's security services are aware of the Ealing student's case. His family, who still live in London, want his name withheld to avoid reprisals. The man had recorded a martyrdom video in which he urged Somalia's refugee diaspora to join him in his jihad. Oh my people, know that I am doing this martyrdom operation for the sake of Allah, he said. I advise you to migrate to Somalia and wage war against your enemies. Death in honour is better than life in humiliation. Sheikh Ahmed Aabi, a moderate Somali religious leader in Kentish Town, northwest London, said that he knew of the Ealing case and had heard from other families of sons travelling to Somalia to join warring Islamist groups. I'm hearing it from parents, he said. They say they [their children] are joining the jihad. I am hearing there are a lot of people. This is a big problem facing our community. |
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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 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."
Think he's guilty? The trial continues. | |
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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. |
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Britain | |
Three guilty over UK 7/21 bomb plot | |
2007-07-09 | |
![]() 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.
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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. |
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Britain | |||
21/7 bomb plot leader admits making five backpack IEDs | |||
2007-01-25 | |||
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The other men accused are Yassin Omar, 26, Manfo Kwaku Asiedu, 33, Ramzi Mohammed, 25, Hussein Osman, 28, and Adel Yahya, 24. The trial continues | |||
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Britain |
Police photos show UK accused at camp |
2007-01-19 |
![]() Muktah Said Ibrahim, 28, Yassin Omar, 26, Ramzi Mohammed, 25, Hussein Osman, 28, and Adel Yahya, 24, are charged with conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to cause explosions on July 21, 2005. The first pictures of the men under surveillance were released yesterday after being shown to the jury in their trial at a London court. The group were beginning to pack up their tents when officers arrived in the area on the morning of May 3, 2004. The jury has previously been told that some of the defendants later attended camps in Scotland and in Kent, southeast England, and that one of them told friends he was "getting fit for jihad". Detective Constable Philip Marshall, who took pictures as the group apparently did exercises, said: "They appeared to be running up and down in the area where they were pictured. They had rucksacks on." Various police photographs showed Mr Omar, the alleged Warren Street Tube bomber, wearing a white hooded top and standing in prayer. Mr Mohammed, the alleged Oval bomber, was shown in camouflage trousers, in prayer and carrying a large rucksack. Mr Yahya, who is accused of helping to plan the attacks but was abroad when they occurred, is also shown praying in a line of other men. Mr Osman, accused of the Shepherd's Bush bomb attempt, was pictured wearing a white T-shirt, carrying a rucksack, walking with a stick. Mr Ibrahim, accused of trying to detonate a bomb on the top deck of a No26 bus, was caught on film carrying a heavy rucksack. The third day of the trial revealed the extent of contact between the authorities and Mr Ibrahim, the alleged leader of the bomb cell. Five months after the camping trip, he was arrested outside Debenhams department store in London's Oxford Street, where he and two other men had set up a stall to distribute Islamic literature. Then on the night of December 11, 2004, he and two companions were detained at Heathrow airport as they waited to board a flight to Islamabad. Mr Ibrahim's luggage contained pound stg. 2000 in cash, a camera, sleeping bag and first aid kit. Rizwan Majiv, who was with Mr Ibrahim, also had a large amount of cash, a first aid kit in a camouflaged box and extracts from a manual on treating ballistics injuries. During questioning, Mr Ibrahim claimed he was going to Pakistan to attend Mr Majiv's wedding. But he did not know the name of the bride or the circumstances of the betrothal. The court also heard yesterday that Mr Omar married with unusual haste just four days before the attempted bombings. All six defendants deny the charges against them. |
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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 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. | |
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India-Pakistan |
Dawood Ibrahim now in the same class as al-Qaeda brass |
2006-02-16 |
Police forces around the world will soon turn on the heat against underworld don Dawood Ibrahim. With Interpol now set to issue a 'Special Notice' against the global terrorist, his ability to travel on a Pakistani passport will be curtailed. The special notice is a rare classification. It would have intelligence details of the wanted person's assumed names, passports, travel records and photographs, including latest ones which could have even been the result of plastic surgery. This information would make it difficult for the wanted person to travel. Interpol has slotted some 208 individuals in this category. As of now, only four notices have been issued. These are for top Al-Qaida operatives Al-Zarqawi, the terror organisation's pointman in Iraq, Ramzi Mohammed Abdullah, a Yemen national, Lionel DuMont, a French citizen and Tariq Anwar al-Sayeed, an Egyptian. Dawood is now set to join this select group of highly wanted terror suspects. The mastermind behind the Mumbai blasts is clearly in a bind. His recent move to get his legal consultant to approach the media objecting to remarks labelling him a terrorist indicates his anticipating the Interpol notice. CBI sleuths, looking for the don in connection with the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts case, believe the new notice also makes it more difficult for Dawood's mentors in the secretive Pakistani intelligence-military establishment to protect him. Though he has not been staying at his Karachi house off late, he has been well ensconced in Pakistan. "Since the new notice would be backed by the UNSC, it would be difficult for Pakistan to dodge UN authorities by allowing him to travel on a Pakistani passport and maintain his bank accounts there," said an official of the National Central Bureau (Interpol), New Delhi. Dawood appears to be perturbed over the impending new notice even as he has been dodging Interpol with relative ease for the last 13 years, despite having a Red Corner Notice (RCN) against him. The NCB official said the SN would be more comprehensive. Interpol had decided to issue the S N against certain individuals associated with Al-Qaida in September last year. "New names would be added to the SN list once the Interpol would compile all the data following intelligence inputs," said an official. The Interpol's move will also result in his accounts being frozen world-wide after the Interpol-United Nations Security Council 'Special Notice' becomes effective. This is seen to be a much more potent measure than the existing RCN against Dawood. One Meraj Siddique, said to be Dawood's legal consultant in UK, contacted a TV channel in India and allegedly expressed the don's wish to face trial in London. Besides, Siddique also objected to media reports calling his client a terrorist. The terrorist's move is seen to be ploy to get his name cleared from the British courts, on the lines of the strategy adopted by music director Nadeem while contesting India's extradition plea in connection with the Gulshan Kumar murder case. CBI officials, however, do not see any parallel between Dawood and Nadeem. They said that Dawood, who was designated a global terrorist by US authorities in 2003, would have to come to India to face trial, on the lines of another bomb blasts accused Abu Salem who had to return from Portugal. Indian investigators said that there was a clear difference between a terrorist and a criminal. Even the UN had put Dawood's name in the list of individuals associated with Al-Qaida after CBI managed to marshal clear cut evidence against him, explained sleuths. Once a SN is issued against the don, his details will be circulated to police around the globe and added to the Interpol's database. It will help Interpol member countries to effectively curtail his movements. |
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Britain |
Those Linked to London Transit Attacks |
2005-08-12 |
SUSPECTS LINKED TO FAILED ATTACKS OF JULY 21: Muktar Said Ibrahim, 27, Ramzi Mohammed, 23 and Yasin Hassan Omar, 24: Charged with attempted murder, conspiracy to murder, possessing or making explosives and conspiracy to use explosives. Hamdi Issac, 27, also known as Osman Hussain: Charged in Rome charged with association with the aim of international terrorism. Manfo Kwaku Asiedu, 32: Charged with conspiracy to murder, reportedly over bomb found July 23 inside backpack in London park. SUSPECTED ACCOMPLICES: Yeshiemebet Girma, 29, wife of Hamdi Issac; her sister Mulumebet Girma, 21; and her brother Asias Girma, 20: Charged with withholding information from police about Issac's whereabouts and helping him evade arrest. Siraj Yassin Abdullah Ali, 30; Ismael Abdurahman, 23; Shadi Abdel Gadir, 22; Wharbi Mohammed, 22; Mohamed Kabashi, 23; Abdul Sharif, 28; and Omar Almagboul, 20: Charged with failing to disclose information about whereabouts of one or more suspects after July 21 attacks. JULY 7 SUICIDE BOMBERS: Hasib Hussain, 18, from suburb of Leeds in northern England: Blew himself up in double-decker bus at Tavistock Square. Shahzad Tanweer, 22, of Leeds: Died in blast on subway train near Aldgate station. Mohammad Sidique Khan, 30, Leeds resident who had moved to West Yorkshire: Died in Edgware Road subway blast. Jermaine Lindsay, 19, Jamaican-born Briton: Died in explosion between King's Cross and Russell Square subway stations. DETAINED PRIOR TO DEPORTATION: Abu Qatada, radical Muslim cleric described by Spanish judge as Osama bin Laden's "spiritual ambassador in Europe." Nine other detainees not immediately identified. OTHERS: Magdy el-Nashar, 33, Egyptian chemist detained in Cairo after July 7 bombings: Freed Aug. 9 after Egyptian authorities said he was not linked to attack. On day of release, told reporters he knew two of July 7 bombers casually in Leeds. Haroon Rashid Aswat, 30, accused by U.S. of conspiring to set up jihad training camp in Oregon in 1999-200: Deported from Zambia to Britain last week and arrested by British police on U.S. warrant. Appeared in London court Thursday; ordered held until hearing in September. |
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Britain |
Two more charged in B-team attacks |
2005-08-08 |
![]() All three July 21 bombing suspects in British police custody have now been charged. A fourth, known both as Osman Hussain and Hamdi Issac, was arrested in Rome and is being held there on international terrorism charges. The three face charges of conspiracy to commit murder; attempted murder; making or possessing an explosive substance with intent to endanger life or cause serious injury; and conspiracy to use explosives. |
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Britain |
Mukhtar Said Ibrahim trained by al-Qaeda in Soddy Arabia |
2005-08-04 |
He landed in Britain as a child of war and famine, a 14-year-old refugee from Eritrea starting a new life in a rich nation. But almost immediately after he arrived in 1992, according to police and news media reports, Muktar Said Ibrahim became a thug. Photos from his school days show a smiling boy in a natty blue blazer and red-striped tie, but friends mostly remember booze, dope and fights with fists and racial insults flying. Ibrahim and his mates were notorious muggers; before he was 17, Ibrahim had been sentenced to five years in prison for knife-wielding assaults. There among the convicts, Ibrahim was introduced to radical Islam, according to media reports. He grew his beard and adopted traditional Muslim clothes. He explained his new religious persona to a friend by saying, "I'm taking life a bit more seriously," the Evening Standard newspaper reported. Seven years later, Ibrahim, 27, has become the suspected ringleader of a gang of four other alleged Islamic radicals, all of them from East Africa, who turned on their adopted country with an attempt on July 21 to bomb London's subway and bus system. British authorities are attempting to determine whether Ibrahim and his associates, who are now in custody after their homemade bombs failed to detonate, are linked to the July 7 attacks that killed 56 people, including the four presumed bombers, and wounded 700 on the transit system. Authorities are also trying to determine whether the two incidents were isolated or the start of a violent campaign against the British people, perhaps coordinated by al Qaeda. With the presumed July 7 bombers dead, this jittery country's best hope of finding those answers may lie with a group of angry young men who found inspiration and leadership from a mugger turned holy warrior. Yasin Hassan Omar, another member of the group, arrived in London in 1992 at age 11. He had tagged along with his sister and her husband, who were fleeing the violent misery of life in their native Somalia. It is unclear what happened to the family after it reached Britain, but media reports here said young Omar was placed in government-sponsored foster care for the next seven years. In 1999, when he was 18, a government agency determined that he was a "vulnerable young adult" and awarded him a one-bedroom apartment in north London, which he paid for with a weekly government housing stipend. Sometime shortly after that, reports here said, he took in a boarder: Ibrahim. Few details have emerged about how the young men met, but reports have said that they may have gravitated toward each other while worshiping at the Finsbury Park mosque in north London, which until 2003 was a center of Islamic extremism. Investigators believe the July 21 attackers mixed their explosives in the apartment where Ibrahim and Omar lived. A neighbor told police she had recently seen Ibrahim in an apartment elevator with a stack of cardboard boxes, which he said contained wallpaper stripper. Friends have recalled Omar as an avid soccer player and an increasingly vocal Muslim who was often seen with Ibrahim in a local gym and coffee shop. After his arrest, a Muslim shopkeeper recounted that Omar had berated him for selling alcohol. The shopkeeper also said: "Two days after September 11, he was coming into my shop praising bin Laden," the Daily Telegraph reported. The British public first saw Omar in grainy closed-circuit television surveillance photos from July 21 that showed him fleeing after a failed attack on the subway's Victoria Line near the Warren Street station. A neighbor reported seeing Omar and Ibrahim at their apartment later that day. Omar was arrested in an apartment in the city of Birmingham in central England six days later, immobilized by a 50,000-volt charge from a police Taser gun. He was the first of the men to be captured. Two days later, a SWAT team seized Ibrahim as he stood in his underpants on the balcony of a London apartment. As a live national television audience watched, he was taken into custody with Ramzi Mohammed, a short, athletic-looking man. Police were apparently brought there by a tip from a neighbor who had seen Ibrahim's picture. Police allege that Mohammed attempted to blow up a subway car near the Oval station in south London on July 21, while Ibrahim was allegedly trying to detonate a bomb on a double-decker bus. Wearing a sweat shirt emblazoned with "New York," Mohammed managed to escape a group of angry passengers who chased and tried to tackle him. His brother, Wahbi Mohammed, who is said to be a London bus driver, was arrested that same day at a dwelling nearby. Police suspect he is a fifth conspirator from July 21 who left a bomb in a backpack in a city park. It is unclear why the bomb was left there. It is also unclear how Ramzi Mohammed and Ibrahim came together, although various witnesses have reported seeing them together in a coffee shop near Notting Hill. But the Mohammed brothers, described in media reports as being from Somalia and in their twenties, shared Ibrahim's passion for radical Islam, according to accounts provided by friends and the imam at their mosque. Ahmed Dahdouh, imam of the Muslim Cultural Heritage Center in North Kensington, told British reporters that the Mohammed brothers often wore white Muslim robes and were well known for their radical views. They ran a stall in Notting Hill where they distributed Islamic books and pamphlets. Much of the material was reportedly radical, and Dahdouh said they harshly criticized him for his moderate outlook, calling him an "infidel." "Ramzi and his brother used to come here in the mosque. There were four or five of them in the group. They caused a lot of trouble," Dahdouh told the Times of London newspaper. "They used to pray on their own, as they used to think we were not proper Muslims. In one of my Friday sermons, I once said that Islam forbids terrorism. I recall Ramzi later came up to me and told me, 'Why did you say that? It's wrong.' " Dahdouh said Mohammed was angry and tried unsuccessfully to have him fired. Five days after the July 21 attacks, Issac Hamdi, also known as Osman Hussain, who is suspected of trying to detonate a bomb in a subway car near the Shepherd's Bush station, boarded a train that took him under the English Channel to continental Europe. The apparent ease with which he left the country has sparked new debate about how strictly Britain should monitor its borders in the era of a largely borderless European Union. Tracing his cell phone as he traveled through Paris, Milan and Bologna, police eventually tracked the naturalized British citizen, reportedly 27 and born in Ethiopia, to his brother's apartment in Rome. He was arrested there on July 29. In the days following his arrest, Italian investigators leaked detailed accounts of their questioning of Hamdi -- unlike British authorities, who can face prosecution for disclosing details of an ongoing criminal investigation. According to several accounts published in Italian newspapers, Hamdi identified Ibrahim as the ringleader of the July 21 group. Hamdi reportedly said that he and Ibrahim met at a gym in Notting Hill, where they worked out and practiced martial arts, and where Ibrahim showed him videotapes of the war in Iraq. He reportedly also said they worshiped together at the Finsbury Park mosque. Hamdi said Ibrahim told him they "had to do something big" in response to the U.S.-led effort in Iraq, in which Britain is the main U.S. partner. He said Ibrahim told him how to make and set off the bomb. Hamdi, who grew up in Italy and speaks fluent Italian, reportedly told investigators he fled to Rome because he had friends and family there. He also said the July 21 group had no ties to al Qaeda. Hamdi has repeatedly said the July 21 bombs were not intended to hurt anyone; on Wednesday his Italian lawyer said Hamdi contends that the bombs were made of flour. A British law enforcement official quoted in the Evening Standard dismissed those claims and said the bombs were "intended to kill and maim on a devastating scale." Despite Hamdi's statements that global networks of Islamic radicals were not involved, a Saudi official confirmed to The Washington Post that Hamdi placed a phone call to Saudi Arabia just before he was arrested, a call first reported in the Daily Telegraph. In addition, the official confirmed a report in the Times that Ibrahim had visited Saudi Arabia in 2003 and told friends he was going there to receive training. Virtually no details have emerged of the interrogations of Ibrahim, who applied for British citizenship in 2003 and received a British passport in September 2004, swearing allegiance to be "faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth." It also remains unclear whether the attackers intended to carry out suicide bombings or expected to survive. A longtime neighbor of Ibrahim, Sarah Scott, told reporters that he recently recounted to her a desire to die a martyr and handed her a pamphlet called "Understanding Islam." It contained a passage that said, "Anyone who says: 'There is no God (worthy of worship) except Allah,' and dies holding to that (belief) will enter Paradise." "He told me he was going to have all these virgins when he got to heaven," Scott told reporters. Police said Ibrahim's parents went to a local police station and made a report immediately after seeing their son identified on television as a potential suspect. They said he had left home in 1994 and had not visited them for many months. "He lives alone elsewhere," they said. "He is not a close family member." |
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