Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/rantburg/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Down Under
Australian Terror suspect denied visit to dying Mother
2008-05-30
A man facing terrorism charges has been refused permission for further visits to the hospital bedside of his dying mother, the NSW Department of Corrective Services says.
Sounds fair. I doubt if his potential victims' relatives would have gotten a chance to visit them prior to him blowing them up.
Mohamed Ali Elomar is one of nine men facing terrorism related charges being held under tight security in NSW. A corrective services spokeswoman said the NSW Supreme Court granted Elomar, who is on remand, permission to visit his mother on Wednesday.
That was pretty nice of them. Us infidels are like that.
Elomar is being held at the Metropolitan Remand Centre at Silverwater, in Sydney's west. The court refused Elomar's application for a second visit to see his mother.
Usually we're not like that until we run out of patience.
"He applied to the Supreme Court to visit his mother and the court granted his release on compassionate grounds on Wednesday and the Department of Corrective Services Commissioner therefore directed to allow him out to see his mother and then he was returned to custody," the corrective services spokeswoman said. "He applied again today and was knocked back, I understand. His mother is dying."
Gosh. My heartstrings have been ever so-o-o-o-o-o tugged.
Elomar was accompanied by heavily armed officers during his visit to Bankstown Hospital, the Seven Network reported.
Mom,on her deathbed, musta been so proud!
Mohamed Ali Elomar, Bradley Umar Sariff Baladjam, Khaled Cheikho, Moustafa Cheikho, Abdul Rakib Hasan, Mohammed Omar Jamal, Mirsad Mulahalilovic, Khaled Sharrouf and Mazen Touma are accused of conspiring with each other, and others, to do acts in preparation for a terrorist act or acts.
Link


Down Under
Terrorism accused refuse to stand
2007-06-01
Nine men accused of preparing a terrorist act on Australian soil have ignited another debate, refusing to stand before the NSW Supreme Court and enter their not guilty pleas. The men, who were allegedly inspired by the September 11 attacks to plan terrorist attacks here, were brought amid tight security to the Supreme Court yesterday. They were formally arraigned, charged with conspiring to prepare a terrorist act, or acts, between July 8, 2004 and November 8, 2005.

Before Justice Anthony Whealy read out the indictment to the men - many dressed in traditional Islamic robes - he asked them to stand and enter their pleas. A lawyer for some of the men, Adam Houda, said there was a problem. "The accused have a problem with standing up … not to be disrespectful but it's a religious observance," Mr Houda said. Justice Whealy said he would not insist. "Judges are made of more robust material … but a jury might take a different view."

However, the men's stance concerned some Muslims. "[Standing up] is not out of respect for the judge, but for the institution of the court regardless of whether its Sharia or any other court," said a lawyer, Irfan Yusuf. "I can't see why these boys would have any problems. I am not aware of any mainstream religious scholars or jurists saying the accused should not stand."
It would seem their problems are of their own making, wouldn't it?
However, a friend of Mr Houda, the prominent Muslim spokesman Keysar Trad, told the Herald the observance came from an instruction by the prophet Muhammad to "not stand" and pay homage to him. "There's a lot of people in the Muslim community who take that proposition literally and feel if you were to stand up for another person that disturbs the balance of equality," Mr Trad said. "[Mr Houda] has assured me they were not being disrespectful."
"No, no! Certainly not!"
The men - Mazen Touma, Mohamed Ali Elomar, Abdul Rakib Hasan, Khaled Cheikho, Moustafa Cheikho, Khaled Sharrouf, Mirsad Mulahalilovic, Omar Baladjam and Mohamed Jamal - all entered not guilty pleas. The youngest is Jamal, 22, the oldest Elomar, 42.

The logistical problems of the trial emerged yesterday, with the realisation that jury members may need to devote much of 2008 to hear the cases against the men. Justice Whealy, who presided over the trial of Faheem Khalid Lodhi last year, set the trial down for February, saying he did not want it to spill over into 2009.
Link


Down Under
9 face trial in Australia terror plot
2007-05-01
Nine men accused of stockpiling bomb-making chemicals and vowing to avenge perceived injustices against Muslims have been ordered to stand trial for Australia's largest alleged terrorist conspiracy, a court official said Tuesday.

Magistrate Michael Price ruled that the evidence was strong enough to be heard by a Supreme Court jury and referred the case to the higher court on June 1, said an official at Penrith Local Court, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with policy.

The nine men each are charged with conspiring between June 2004 and November 2005 to carry out a terrorist act. None of the suspects, who face a maximum penalty of life in prison if convicted, entered a plea, but their lawyers have said they maintain they are innocent. Prosecutors said at the pretrial hearing that the nine suspects bought unrestricted chemicals that can be used in making explosives, and downloaded instructions from the Internet that included how to mix the cocktail of agents used to make the bombs used in the deadly 2005 London subway attacks.

Prosecutors allege the nine were devotees of a radical Muslim cleric sympathetic to Osama bin Laden, and struck a pact to launch a terrorist attack because they felt their religion was under attack. No planned target has been revealed, but police alleged the suspects had Australia's only nuclear reactor — a small facility used to make radioactive medical supplies — under surveillance.

They were arrested in a series of 2005 raids in Sydney and the southern city of Melbourne, where cleric Abdul Nacer Benbrika and other followers also were detained and now face separate charges of belonging to a terrorist group. Authorities said police found transcripts of bin Laden speeches and other al-Qaida material, as well as videos of people being beheaded, in some of the suspects' homes.

The nine suspects are Mohammed Ali Elomar, Mazen Touma, Abdul Rakib Hasan, Khaled Cheikho, Moustafa Cheikho, Khaled Sharrouf, Mirsad Mulahalilovic, Omar Baladjam and Mohammed Jamal.
Link


Down Under
Chemicals stockpiled for 'jihad on Sydney'
2007-03-09
NINE suspected terrorists allegedly stockpiled a cache of deadly chemicals as they plotted a "violent jihad" on Sydney. In what is being described as the biggest terror trial in Australia's history, Penrith Local Court yesterday heard for the first time detailed allegations against the nine alleged Muslim extremists. The men stand accused of plotting a massive terrorist attack on Sydney - with Lucas Heights nuclear plant the possible target.

In her opening address, prosecutor Wendy Abraham QC claimed preparations for an attack involved chemical stockpiling, the collation of "extremist" documents and specialised terrorist training. The court heard documents written in Arabic showed step-by-step instructions on how to make deadly explosives such as TATP and HMTD. The materials were allegedly found during searches of their homes and vehicles, with one found hidden in a children's book called Choice Islamic Stories.

Bradley Umar Sariff Baladjam, Khaled Cheikho, Moustafa Cheikho, Mohamed Ali Elomar, Abdul Rakib Hasan, Mohammed Omar Jamal, Mirsad Mulahalilovic, Khaled Sharrouf and Mazen Touma faced court together for the first time since their arrest during ASIO raids in November 2005. The court heard Touma had told his mother he was about to enter paradise and that "Allah's satisfaction is more important than yours".

"He (Touma) spoke of Allah giving him a paradise for martyrdom," Ms Abraham said. "It is alleged he said his mother should be patient because tomorrow her children would be in paradise."

The Crown alleges the defendants each played a role in conspiring to prepare for a terrorist attack by equipping themselves with the "knowledge, ability and means to prepare and plan for a terrorist attack".

"They believed Islam was under attack and and in defence of Islam and other Muslims ... the primary tool was violent jihad," Ms Abraham said. The defendants allegedly obtained or attempted to obtain chemicals and necessary items that could be used in the construction of explosives. These include 50 litres of hydrochloric acid, 200 litres of sulphuric acid and more than 60 litres of hydroperoxide. It is also alleged the group had large amounts of "extremist" and instructional material as well as firearms and ammunition used in SKS and AK47 semi-automatic weapons.

The court heard how the men shopped at chemists, hardware stores and discount shops in Sydney and Melbourne for chemicals and items such as PVC piping. The committal hearing, expected to run for at least two months, continues today.
Link


Down Under
Heavy security as Aussie terror plot hearings begin
2007-03-05
A hearing began Monday to determine whether nine members of an alleged Islamic terror cell should stand trial over claims they stockpiled bomb-making materials in a plot to attack Australia's only nuclear reactor. The men, who were arrested in a series of pre-dawn raids in late 2005, stand accused of conspiracy to make explosives in preparation for a terrorist attack, and being members of a terrorist group.

A hearing to determine whether there is enough evidence to go to trial began Monday at the Penrith District Court amid tight security. Armed police stood guard at the courthouse and patrolled nearby streets, while lawyers, journalists and members of the public underwent rigorous security checks before being allowed to enter the building. But James Renwick, a lawyer for the national spy agency, the Australian Security Intelligence Organization, told Magistrate Michael Price that he would request that the hearing be closed to the public for national security reasons. Price did not immediately rule on the request.

The nine accused -Mohammed Ali Elomar, Mazen Touma, Abdul Rakib Hasan, Khaled Cheikho, Moustafa Cheikho, Khaled Sharrouf, Mirsad Mulahalilovic, Omar Baladjam and Mohammed Jamal -did not appear in court Monday, but were likely to attend Tuesday when lawyers present the evidence against them.

A police report handed to the court at the time of the arrests claimed the men had attended "jihad" training courses in the Australian Outback and were assembling chemicals, detonators, digital timers and batteries to carry out a major bomb attack. The Lucas Height nuclear reactor, a facility used to make radioactive medical supplies on the southern edge of Sydney, Australia's most populous city, was listed as a possible target.

The report also alleged several members of the group took "jihad training" trips to the Outback town of Bourke, about 650 kilometers (400 miles) northwest of Sydney, in mid-2005. The hearing is expected to last up to three months.
Link


Down Under
"I'll chop Bush up" (and other rants by Pious Peace-loving Muslims)
2006-04-13
ONE of nine men arrested in terror raids last year asked that John Howard be told Australia would ultimately be ruled by Muslim law, a court heard yesterday.
Remember that article quite some time ago about that cleric who said Australia was a muslim country, since it was supposedly firts discovered by muslim sailors?
Khaled Cheikho, who described Allah's law as the "only law worthy of ruling mankind", also allegedly said that democracy was "full of s . . t". "So you tell Howard this and pass it on to Bush the motherf. . .er, tell him (I'm) gonna come and chop him up." Cheikho, 33, is charged along with eight other Sydney men over alleged preparations for a terrorist attack.

A revised federal police document tendered to Central Local Court for the bail application of one of his co-accused, Mirsad Mulahalilovic, on Monday also contained details relating to the other eight men. It detailed an outburst by Cheikho after he was arrested on November 8, 2005, and warned anything he said would be recorded.

Naming the Prime Minister and US President George W. Bush, Cheikho allegedly warned that Allah would "destroy wrongdoers" as he was the "annihilator of the tyrants and the infidels". "Did Howard ever tell you this . . . tell him I swear by Allah, you have put no fear into my heart, no fear," Cheikho allegedly said. "This is who we worship, who do you worship, Howard and the legislators? Your democracy is full of hypocrisy, is that it?

"Sharia law is gonna prevail throughout the land . . . You tell Howard this, tell him Islam is gonna rule this land."

He told police to go and learn about Sharia law, because "you're us". Cheikho allegedly continued: "The land, all the land is Allah's land, Allah created it and he's given it to Muslims and the Muslims are going to rule it."

The nine accused are said to have bought materials and prepared to carry out an attack on Australian soil. In evidence already revealed against them, police allege the men engaged in covert meetings to discuss attacks. Thousands of computer files were seized from all the men, containing anti-western songs, literature and speeches from sheikhs around the world.

Mulahalilovic allegedly had images of beheadings, a video of the bombing of the Australian embassy in Jakarta and a document which was "praising the London bombings and promising Muslims more similar operations", the statement said. Others had similar material, including writings in support of jihad and the killing of non-believers. The group was also alleged to have been stockpiling chemicals and other products used in bomb-making.

Mulahalilovic has twice had a bail application refused but none of the other men have made an application.

Cheikho, Mulahalilovic, Mohamed Ali Elomar, Abdul Rhakib Hasan, Omar Baladjam, Khaled Sharrouf, Moustafa Cheikho, and Mazen Touma will reappear in Central Local Court next week for mention.
Link


Down Under
Aussie hard boyz had chemical stockpiles
2005-11-10
The Sydney arm of an alleged Islamic terror network had stockpiled enough chemicals to make at least 15 large bombs, a newspaper reported Thursday, as police sifted through evidence seized in a series of pre-dawn raids earlier this week.

The eight suspects arrested Tuesday in Sydney and charged with conspiracy to manufacture explosives in preparation for a terrorist attack had registered a series of company names to justify large purchases of industrial chemicals, The Sydney Morning Herald reported, citing unidentified investigators.

Two suspects, part-time actor Omar Baladjam, 28, and Bosnian-born Mirsad Mulahalilovic, 29, had painting businesses that could be used as a possible cover for buying the chemicals, the newspaper reported.

Acetone -- often used as a solvent and paint thinner -- is a key ingredient in a deadly cocktail of chemicals dubbed "Mother of Satan," because so many people have died while preparing the deadly bombs, the Sydney Morning Herald said. It did not specify whether the ingredient had been found among the evidence, however.

Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty cast doubt on the report, but Attorney-General Philip Ruddock confirmed bomb ingredients were seized in the raids.

"My understanding of the evidence is that some of the product had been actually purchased, others had been ordered," he told ABC radio. "The intelligence assessment is that this was an enterprise designed to manufacture a very large quantity of explosives."

The raids led to the postponement Thursday of the trial of former Melbourne cab driver Joseph Thomas on charges of sending funds to al Qaeda and receiving money from the terror group.

Thomas, who has pleaded innocent to receiving al Qaeda money and has not entered pleas to other charges, was due to stand trial next Monday, but Supreme Court Judge Philip Cummins said publicity about this week's terror arrests in Melbourne and Sydney could prejudice a jury -- even though Thomas' case is unrelated.

Meanwhile, federal lawmakers were expected to begin debating Prime Minister John Howard's proposed raft of tough new anti-terrorism laws later Thursday, and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said the government would consider introducing laws to strip convicted terrorists of their Australian citizenship.

The anti-terror legislation, which has met with opposition from legal and civil rights groups, would enable authorities to hold terror suspects without charge for two weeks and monitor them with electronic tracking devices for up to a year.

The proposed laws also toughen jail terms for inciting race hatred or violence against the community, and have been criticized as an attack on free speech.

The debate comes as investigators continue to examine evidence seized in Tuesday's terror raids, in which 17 people were arrested and police said they had foiled a "catastrophic" attack on Australian soil.

Victoria state police acting Deputy Commissioner Noel Ashby said Wednesday that police and security agencies were examining evidence including computers, documents and chemicals, and may file more charges against nine men arrested in Melbourne and eight in Sydney.

Prosecutors said the Sydney and Melbourne terror cells were led by Algerian-born radical cleric Abu Bakr, 45, who was among those arrested. He made headlines earlier this year by calling Osama bin Laden a "great man," and saying he would be violating his religious beliefs if he told his followers not to travel to Iraq to join the insurgency.

Seven of the Sydney suspects were taken Wednesday in a high-security vehicle convoy to a maximum security prison 200 kilometers (125 miles) from the city, and will be held in solitary confinement, according to media reports.

The eighth suspect, Baladjam, was recovering in a heavily guarded Sydney hospital after being injured in a gunfight with police. He has been charged with a terror offense and intent to murder.
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/rantburg/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-7 More