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Britain
Suspect was in 'al-Qaeda' video
2008-06-18
A man accused of being part of a plot to blow up passenger planes has told a court how he agreed to appear in an 'al Qaeda-style militant' video. But Tanvir Hussain, 27, denied that the footage he recorded alongside five of his co-defendants in July 2006 was part of a set of martyrdom films.
"No, no, certainly not!"
Eight men deny conspiring to murder and endanger aircraft leaving the UK. Their arrests in August 2006 led to a ban on passengers carrying most liquids on board aircraft.

Prosecutors allege the men planned to make hydrogen peroxide bombs disguised as soft drinks to detonate in mid-air on at least seven planes flying out of London's Heathrow airport.

Mr Hussain told the jury at Woolwich Crown Court that the videos were meant to be included in a documentary protesting against western foreign policy. The messages would be interspersed with 'shocking images of people dying in Afghanistan, Iraq and Palestine', he said.

He said he was 'taken aback' when his friend and co-defendant Abdulla Ahmed Ali, 27, revealed plans to blow up a device in a public place as the two men spoke at his flat in April 2006. Mr Hussain said: 'He said to me: 'It ain't going to be nothing big, just a loud bang to cause panic and alarm.''

Michel Massih QC, for the defence, queried whether he had asked Mr Ali if he intended to kill anyone. Mr Hussain replied: 'I didn't ask him. I know Ahmed wouldn't do nothing like that.'

Mr Sarwar and Mr Ali's co-defendants are Tanvir Hussain, 27, of Leyton, east London, Waheed Zaman, 24, and Arafat Waheed Khan, 27, both of Walthamstow, east London. Also charged are Mohammed Gulzar, 26, of Barking, east London, Ibrahim Savant, 27, of Stoke Newington, north London, and Umar Islam, 30, of Plaistow, east London. All eight deny two joint charges of conspiring to murder and to endanger aircraft.
"Lies! All lies!"
Link


Britain
Jet bombing plot mastermind visited Pakistan, court told
2008-04-06
The mastermind of the eight Britons, who allegedly planned to blow up airliners in mid air, had travelled to Islamabad from Heathrow just two months before his arrest in August 2006.

At least seven aircraft flying to major cities across North America were the targets, the court was told. But the jury has also heard that a computer memory stick found at the High Wycombe.

The jury at Woolwich Crown Court was played parts of one of the martyrdom videos featuring a man said to be defendant Umar Islam, who was shown speaking of a desire to kill non-Muslims. As the chilling martyrdom videos of six of the eight accused were played in Woolwich Crown Court, the prosecution told the jury that one of the accused, Assad Ali Sarwar had travelled to Islamabad from Heathrow in June 2006, just two months before his arrest on August 9.

The seven other accused were also arrested at the same time. The prosecution told the court that Assad did not intend to die himself and had direct links to those overseas who may have a clear interest in the success of any such terrorist outrage struck in the name of Islam.

The prosecution said the trip to Pakistan was connected to the plot to detonate bombs on board transatlantic aircrafts.

Just a day before the arrests in London in August 2006, Pakistani authorities had arrested Rashid Rauf from a city in Punjab. Britain had been asking Pakistan for extradition of Rashid Rauf who escaped from the custody of Rawalpindi police in December 2007 under mysterious circumstances.

The prosecution told the court that Assad did not make his own martyrdom video and described him as “custodian” of recordings made by six of his co-defendants. The chilling videos show the British fanatics praising Osama bin Laden and threatening death, terror and destruction in retaliation for US and British actions in Iraq and Afghanistan and their policy on Palestine.

Those who planned to board and blow up at least seven planes bound for the United States and Canada are all Londoners aged between 23 and 29 and include Abdulla Ahmed Ali, Assad Sarwar, Tanvir Hussain, Ibrahim Savant, Mohammed Gulzar, Arafat Waheed Khan, Waheed Zaman, and Umar Islam.

The jury has also heard that a computer memory stick found at the High Wycombe home of Mr Sarwar revealed the alleged plotters also considered other UK targets. They included Canary Wharf, a gas pipeline running between Belgium and the UK, other UK airports, as well as companies that store and process hydrogen peroxide. Another memory stick found in Mr Sarwar’s garage contained information about UK power stations, internet service provider exchanges, oil refineries, the National Grid and UK airports, the jury was told.

The court also heard how the alleged plotters stockpiled materials needed for their home-made liquid devices, including 18 litres of hydrogen peroxide, wires and syringes, which the prosecution claims they intended to smuggle on to aircraft disguised as 500ml soft drinks.
Link


Britain
'British gang behind foiled Trans-Atlantic terror plot'
2008-04-04
Extremists plotted suicide attacks on at least seven flights from Britain to the United States in a simultaneous attack of “truly global impact”, a prosecutor said on Thursday. The eight men, whose arrest prompted tough limits on the carrying of liquids in hand baggage on to planes, wanted to target seven flights from London’s Heathrow airport to New York, Washington, Chicago, San Francisco, Toronto and Montreal, prosecutor Peter Wright said as he opened the case against them.

They aimed to use liquid explosives in soft drinks bottles to cause “a civilian death toll from an act of terrorism on an almost unprecedented scale”, Wright added. He said the accused were “not long off” activating their plan and had talked of up to 18 different suicide bombers targeting flights, when police busted the group in August 2006.

The seven flights were operated by United Airlines, American Airlines and Air Canada. They left Heathrow daily, within roughly two and a half hours of each other — meaning they would have been in mid-air simultaneously, Wright said. “These flights were particularly vulnerable to a co-ordinated attack upon them while in flight. If each of these aircraft was successfully blown up the potential for loss of life was indeed considerable,” he said. “When the mid-flight explosions began the authorities would be unable to prevent the other flights from meeting a similar fate as they would already be in mid-air and carrying their deadly cargo,” he added. “These men and others were actively engaged in a deadly plan” which would have resulted in “a civilian death toll from an act of terrorism on an almost unprecedented scale,” he said.

In the dock sat “some of those prepared to lose their lives,” he said, adding that they bore the “cold-eyed certainty of the fanatic” and were “indifferent to the carnage that was likely to ensue”.

The eight men in the dock at Woolwich Crown Court in London were: Abdulla Ahmed Ali, also known as Ahmed Ali Khan, 27; Assad Sarwar, 27; Tanvir Hussain, 27; Mohammed Gulzar, 26; Ibrahim Savant, 27; Arafat Waheed Khan, 26; Waheed Zaman, 23; and Umar Islam, also known as Brian Young, 29. Seven are from London, while Sarwar lives in the midlands.
I'da guessed most of not all of them with the possible exception of Brian were from Pakistain.
All deny the charges of conspiracy to commit murder between January 1 and August 11, 2006 and conspiracy to commit an act of violence likely to endanger the safety of an aircraft between the same dates.
Per the Khaleej Times, up to 18 could have been involved.
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Britain
Transatlantic bomb plot suspects go on trial
2008-04-03
A man from High Wycombe is among eight set to go on trial accused of plotting to explode home-made liquid bombs on transatlantic passenger aircraft. Mr Justice Calvert-Smith will preside over the trial of eight defendants, including Assad Sarwar, 27, at high security Woolwich Crown Court in south-east London.

Outlining the case to potential jurors on Wednesday, the judge said the trial would be long, high profile and with dozens of witnesses. He said: "This case concerns an allegation that in 2006 a number of men planned to create bombs which some of their number would take on board passenger aircraft flying from London Heathrow to various destinations in Canada and the USA. It is further alleged that the bombs were planned to be set off when the aircraft were airborne and the bombers and all on board the aircraft would be killed."

All eight men deny two charges linked to the alleged plot that counter terrorist police claimed to foil in August 2006. The first charge alleged the men conspired to murder, contrary to the 1977 Criminal Law Act, between January 1 and August 11 2006. The second charge alleged the men conspired to commit an act of violence likely to endanger the safety of an aircraft between the same dates.

The eight men are: Sarwar; Abdulla Ahmed Ali, aka Ahmed Ali Khan, 27, of Walthamstow; Tanvir Hussain, 27, of Leyton, east London; Mohammed Gulzar, 26, of Barking, Essex; Ibrahim Savant, 27, of Stoke Newington, north London; Arafat Waheed Khan, 26, of Walthamstow; Waheed Zaman, 23, of Walthamstow and Umar Islam, aka Brian Young, 29, of Hackney, east London.
Link


Britain
September Trial for London Suspects
2006-08-24
Amid tight security in central London yesterday afternoon, 11 people appeared before the City of Westminster Magistrates Court charged with conspiracy to murder and a new offense of preparing acts of terrorism under the 2006 Anti-terrorism Act, which came into effect in April this year. All the 11 people were remanded in custody. They all deny the charges.

The 11 accused arrived separately at the court in vans with blacked-out windows, having been ferried from the high security Paddington Green police station in Edgware Road. The charges were in connection with an alleged terror plot to blow up nine trans-Atlantic airliners, using liquid explosives disguised in soft drink bottles and smuggled on to the planes in hand luggage. The proceedings were dragged out because Westminster Magistrate Court is very small and compact.

The demeanor of the suspects was described by one observer as “unexceptional”. Some of them glanced and waved to family members and friends who had packed the public gallery in the court. Eight of the suspects — Tanvir Hussain, 25, from Leyton, east London; Umar Islam (born Brian Young), 28, from Stratford, east London; Arafat Waheed Khan, 25, from Walthamstow, east London; Ahmed Abdullah Ali, 25, from Walthamstow; Ibrahim Savant (born Oliver Savant), 25, of north London; Waheed Zaman, 22, from Walthamstow; Assad Ali Sarwar, 26, from High Wycombe and 19-year-old Adam Khatib, from Walthamstow —were all remanded in custody until Sept. 4 when they will appear at the Old Bailey. They were charged with conspiracy to murder and with preparing acts of terrorism under Section 5 of the 2006 Anti-Terrorism Act. No applications for bail were made.

Two others — Mehran Hussain, and Cossar Ali, a 23-year old mother of an eight-month-old baby and wife of accused Ahmed Abdullah Ali — were charged with failing to disclose information which might be of material assistance in preventing others from the commission of a terrorist act. The eleventh person charged was a 17-year-old boy who cannot be named under the law because of his age and who is accused of possessing information of use to someone preparing a terrorist act including a book on bombs, suicide notes and the wills of people prepared to commit terrorist acts. The three were remanded in custody until Aug. 29 with no bail applied for on their behalf.
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