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Terror Networks
US targets sanctions at accused German terrorists
2008-12-05
The United States announced economic sanctions Thursday targeted at three men accused by Germany of being members of an al-Qaida-linked group.

The three men were charged in September in connection with a foiled 2007 terrorist plot to attack U.S. and German targets in central Germany, the federal prosecutor's office has said. Authorities accuse them of plotting bombings on restaurants, pubs, discos and airports. Fritz Martin Gelowicz, 29, Daniel Martin Schneider, 22, and Adem Yilmaz, 29, also were each charged with membership in a terrorist organization. If convicted, they face a possible 10 years in prison.

The move by the U.S. Treasury Department would freeze any assets the three hold in the United States and would prohibit anyone from making financial transactions with them.

The suspects are accused of being members of the radical Islamic Jihad Union, an offshoot of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, a jihadist group with origins in Central Asia. According to the U.S. State Department, the Islamic Jihad Union was responsible for coordinated bombings outside the U.S. and Israeli embassies in July 2004 in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent. Members have been trained in explosives by al-Qaida instructors and the group has ties to Osama bin Laden and fugitive Taliban leader Mullah Omar, the State Department says.

The group was considering attacks in many cities, including Frankfurt, Dortmund, Duesseldorf, Cologne, Stuttgart, Munich and Ramstein—home of a large U.S. Air Force base—which were to be carried out before parliament voted in October 2007 to extend Germany's commitment of troops to Afghanistan, German prosecutors have said. Despite their well developed plot, authorities say they were never close to reaching their goals.

Gelowicz, Schneider and Yilmaz were arrested in September 2007.
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Europe
Germany Arrests 2 Suspected in Terror Plot
2008-10-30
German police arrested two men near Frankfurt on terrorism charges Friday, alleging they were involved in a cell that had plotted to blow up U.S. targets in Germany a year ago.

Federal prosecutors said the two suspects -- a German citizen and a Turkish national -- had traveled separately to Pakistan during 2007 in an attempt to receive training at camps operated by the Islamic Jihad Union, a terrorist group allied with al-Qaeda.

Authorities said the men had shared bank account information and a debit card with three men arrested in September 2007 on suspicion of planning mass bombing attacks on U.S. targets in Germany.

Prosecutors identified the German citizen as Omid S., a 27-year-old of Afghan descent, and said he had received training at a militant camp along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border during the spring and summer of 2007.

The Turkish man, identified as 27-year-old Hueseyin O., also traveled to the region last year, prosecutors said. Before he could reach the camp, however, he was detained by Pakistani security forces and forced to return to Germany, according to a statement released by the German federal prosecutor's office in Karlsruhe.

German officials said that they believe the pair may have been aware of plans by the Islamic Jihad Union to bomb U.S. targets in Germany but that they did not accuse the pair of playing a direct role. Both men were charged with membership in a terrorist group.

Earlier this month, German prosecutors filed an indictment against the three suspected ringleaders of last year's plot and said they had discussed a number of possible bombing targets, including U.S. military bases in Germany and a dance club in the city of Giessen.

Police arrested the three men Sept. 4, 2007, in the rural village of Oberschledorn as they transferred bombmaking chemicals from a rented house. Police said they had stockpiled more than 1,500 pounds of the chemicals to construct homemade explosives and had smuggled detonators from Turkey.

Two of the men were German natives -- Fritz Martin Gelowicz and Daniel Martin Schneider -- who had converted to Islam. The third suspect, Adem Yilmaz is a Turkish national who grew up in Germany. The three suspects, all in their 20s, had attended training camps in Pakistan run by the Islamic Jihad Union, prosecutors said.

A fourth man in the plot was arrested in Turkey last November and is awaiting extradition to Germany. A trial date has not been set.
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Europe
German prosecutors charge 3 in terror plot
2008-09-02
Three men were charged Tuesday in connection with a foiled 2007 terrorist plot to attack U.S. and German targets in central Germany, the federal prosecutor's office said.

Fritz Martin Gelowicz, 29, Daniel Martin Schneider, 22, and Adem Yilmaz, 29 were each charged with membership in a terrorist organization, said Frank Wallenta, a spokesman for federal prosecutors in Karlsruhe. If convicted, they face a possible 10 years in prison.

The suspects are accused of being members of the radical Islamic Jihad Union, an offshoot of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, a jihadist group with origins in Central Asia. According to the U.S. State Department, the Islamic Jihad Union was responsible for coordinated bombings outside the U.S. and Israeli embassies in July 2004 in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent. Members have been trained in explosives by al-Qaida instructors and the group has ties to Osama bin Laden and fugitive Taliban leader Mullah Omar, the State Department says.

The German cell had stockpiled 1,600 pounds of highly concentrated hydrogen peroxide at a rented cottage in central Germany in preparation for their plot -- enough to build bombs more powerful than those that killed 191 commuters in Madrid in 2004 and 52 in London in 2005, authorities have said. Officials said they could have mixed the peroxide, purchased from a chemical supplier, with other substances to make explosives equivalent to 1,200 pounds of dynamite. ...
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