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Fifth Column
British Muslim computer geek revealed as Al Qaeda's top cyber terrorist
2008-01-16
A computer nerd from Shepherd's Bush, West London, became al Qaeda's top internet agent, it can be revealed today. Younes Tsouli, 23, an IT student at a London college, used his top-floor flat in W12 to help Islamist extremists wage a propaganda war against the West.

Under the name Irhabi 007 — combining the James Bond reference with the Arabic for terrorist — he worked with al Qaeda leaders in Iraq and came up with a way to convert often gruesome videos into a form that could be put onto the Web. Videos he posted included messages from Osama bin Laden and images of the kidnapping and murder of hostages in Iraq such as American Nick Berg.

His capture led to the arrest of several Islamic terrorists around the world, including 17 men in Canada and two in the US.
Observing his mug shot, it appears he is prone to accidents!
Fell down the stairs again, did he?
Cut himself shaving.
Associates linked to Tsouli in the UK have also now been detained. His 10-year jail sentence was increased to 16 years last month.

At first intelligence operatives who came across his activities dismissed him as a joke. It was only when anti-terrorist detectives began trawling through files on his computer after his arrest that they realised his true significance.

When he was seized, forensic science officers found that Tsouli had been creating a website called YOUBOMBIT. At his trial at Woolwich crown court a jury heard how the Met trawled through a “hugely gigantic'' amount of material — computers, CDs and memory sticks — to bring Tsouli and two other men to justice. Detectives found literature urging Muslims to take up the fight against other religions. It was the first time anyone in Britain had been prosecuted for inciting terrorist murder purely based on the internet, the court heard.

Tsouli, who set up and ran several sites over the summer of 2005, was described as the most prominent of the three on trial. The other two were also jailed. One intelligence source said: “In a network structure, if you get the right guy the whole thing goes down.”

Assistant Commissioner Peter Clarke, the head of the Met's counterterrorism operations, said: “It was the first virtual conspiracy to murder that we have seen.”

Tsouli arrived in London in 2001 with his father, a Moroccan diplomat. He studied IT at a college in central London and was quickly radicalised by images of the war in Iraq posted on the internet. By 2003 he had already begun posting his own material including a manual on computer hacking and a year later had moved on to publishing extremist images and al Qaeda propaganda on the web.

It is claimed al Qaeda leaders in Iraq spotted Tsouli's work and took the decision to recruit him, using his expertise to post their own extremist videos to a wider audience.

In 2005, Tsouli became administrator for the web forum al-Ansat, used by 4,500 extremists to communicate with each other, sharing such practical information as how to make explosives and how to get to Iraq to become a suicide bomber. But the enterprise had become so huge, it began to attract the attention of cyber-trackers who monitor the internet for extremists, leading to Tsouli's arrest.
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Terror Networks
Al-Qaeda’s 007
2008-01-16
About a dozen uniformed police in riot gear, and a handful of detectives, gathered outside the four-storey terraced house on a quiet street just off Shepherds Bush roundabout in West London.

After a tip-off from overseas colleagues, they knew that inside was a man in contact with a group planning a bombing in Central Europe. His name was Younes Tsouli, but the detectives knew little more about him.

As they tried to shove their way in, the young man in the top-floor flat forced his door shut. It didn’t hold for long. Once the police flooded in, there was a struggle. A mirror smashed and one officer emerged bloodied from a shard of glass. Tsouli was overpowered. “He was thoroughly detained,” one detective recalls. At first, officers were not sure that they had the right person: the long-haired young man in jogging shorts bore little resemblance to the short-haired man in the photo they had been given. But when he confirmed his name, they knew they had their man. Two detectives led him away.
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Britain
London court jails 'cyber-jihadis'
2007-07-05
THREE "cyber-jihadis" who used the internet to urge Muslims to wage holy war on non-believers were jailed for between six-and-a-half and 10 years today in the first case of its kind in Britain.
Tariq Al-Daour, Younes Tsouli and Waseem Mughal had close links with al-Qaeda in Iraq and thought there was a "global conspiracy" to wipe out Islam, the Woolwich Crown Court in south-east London was told.

Moroccan-born Tsouli, 23, was jailed for 10 years; UAE-born Al-Daour, 21, received a six-and-a-half year sentence; and 24-year-old Mughal, who was born in Britain, was given seven-and-a-half years.

Sentencing them, Judge Charles Openshaw said the men had engaged in "cyber jihad", encouraging others to kill "kuffars" or non-believers.

"It would seem that internet websites have become an effective means of communicating such ideas," he said, although he added that none of the men had come close to carrying out acts of violence themselves.

Referring to Tsouli, whom he recommended for deportation to Morocco after serving his sentence, he said: "He came no closer to a bomb or a firearm than a computer keyboard."

Al-Daour, from west London, yesterday admitted "inciting another person to commit an act of terrorism wholly or partly outside the United Kingdom which would, if committed in England and Wales, constitute murder."

Tsouli, also from west London, and Mughal, from Kent, southeast England, admitted the same charge on Monday.

The guilty pleas came part way through a trial which had run for two months.

Al-Daour, Tsouli and Mughal also pleaded guilty to a $4.25 million conspiracy to defraud banks, credit card and charge card companies.

The trial was told the computer experts spent at least 12 months trying to encourage people to follow the extreme ideology of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, using email and radical websites.

Films of hostages and beheadings were found among their possessions, including footage of British contractor Ken Bigley, who was killed in Iraq in 2004; and US journalist Daniel Pearl, killed in Pakistan in 2002.

Compact discs containing instructions for making explosives and poisons were also found, with other documents giving advice on how to use a rocket-propelled grenade and how to make booby traps and a suicide vest.

Police who trawled through a mass of data and websites also discovered online conversations in which Al-Dour talked of sponsoring terrorist attacks, becoming "the new Osama," and justifying suicide bombings.
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Britain
London court jails three Qaeda aides for online terror
2007-07-06
Three men, who used the Internet to urge Muslims to fight non-believers, were jailed for between six-and-a-half and 10 years on Thursday. Tariq Al Daour, Younes Tsouli and Waseem Mughal had close links with Al Qaeda in Iraq and thought there was a “global conspiracy” to wipe out Islam, Woolwich Crown Court, in southeast London, was told. Moroccan-born Tsouli, 23, was jailed for 10 years; UAE-born Al Daour, 21, received a six-and-a-half year sentence; and 24-year-old Mughal, who was born in Britain, was given seven-and-a-half years.

Al Daour on Wednesday admitted a charge of “inciting another person to commit an act of terrorism wholly or partly outside the United Kingdom which would, if committed in England and Wales, constitute murder.” Tsouli and Mughal admitted the same charge on Monday. The guilty pleas came two months into their trial. Al Daour and Tsouli, who lived in west London, and Mughal, from Kent in southeast England, also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud banks, credit card and charge card companies.

The trial was told the computer experts spent at least 12 months trying to encourage people to follow Al Qaeda’s head Osama Bin Laden, using email and radical websites. Films of western hostages and beheadings were found among their possessions.
Link


Britain
Man guilty of using internet to promote jihad
2007-07-04
A third man with close links to al-Qa'eda in Iraq has admitted using the internet to urge Muslims to wage a violent holy war against all non-believers. Tariq al-Daour, along with accomplices Younes Tsouli and Waseem Mughal, believed there was a "global conspiracy" to wipe out Islam and spent at least a year trying to encourage people to follow the extreme ideology of Osama bin Laden using email and radical websites.

The jury at Woolwich Crown Court heard how the "intelligent" young men used computers to try and recruit people to a global jihad. Films of hostages and beheadings were found in their possession. These included footage of Ken Bigley pleading for his life and Americans Nick Berg and Daniel Pearl being killed.

In one online conversation, when Al-Daour was asked what he would do with £1 million, he replied: "Sponsor terrorist attacks, become the new Osama [Bin Laden]." In another conversation he said suicide bombings were permissible but he did not like them unless they killed many people because "a Muslim life is worth more than that".

Al-Daour had CDs containing instructions for making explosives and poisons including a recipe for creating a rotten meat toxin which, in its pure form, is "the most toxic substance known to man", the court was told.

UAE-born Al-Daour, 21, of Bayswater, west London, admitted inciting another person to commit and act of terrorism wholly or partly outside the United Kingdom which would, if committed in England and Wales, constitute murder. Moroccan-born Tsouli, 23, of Shepherd's Bush, west London, and British-born Mughal, 24, of Chatham, Kent, admitted the same charge on Monday. Their guilty pleas come two months into their trial. The men also admitted conspiring together and with others to defraud banks, credit card companies and charge card companies.

The judge directed the jury to return formal guilty verdicts against Al-Daour, in light of his pleas. The three men will be sentenced tomorrow.
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