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Recent Appearances... Rantburg
Willy Brigitte Willie Brigitte al-Qaeda Down Under 20031122  
  Willy Brigitte Lashkar-e-Taiba Europe 20040212  
  Willy Brigitte Salafist Group for Call and Combat Europe 20040212  
  Willie Brigitte Lashkar-e-Taiba Afghanistan/South Asia French In Jug Tough Guy 20050730  
    deported from Australia and is being interrogated by French authorities
  Willie Brigitte Ahlus Sunnah wal Jamaah Down Under 20040606 Link
  Willie Virgile Brigitte al-Qaeda Down Under 20031027  
  Willy Brigitte al-Qaeda Down Under 20050816  

India-Pakistan
CIA winked at Pak Army training camps for LT: Paris
2009-11-14
[The News (Pak) Top Stories] Pakistan's army once ran training camps for the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LT) militant group with the apparent knowledge of the CIA, an example of complicity that raises questions about the current state of the nuclear-armed nation. So says former French investigating magistrate Jean-Louis Bruguiere, author of a new book that provides rare insight both into alleged past army support for the defunct Lashkar-e-Taiba and to the group's connections to a global network linked to al-Qaeda.

The question of Pakistani military support for Islamist militants is crucial for the United States as it tries to work out how to stabilise the country and neighbouring Afghanistan.Bruguiere bases the information in his book on international terrorism, "Ce que je n'ai pas pu dire" ("What I could not say") on testimony given by jailed Frenchman Willy Brigitte, who spent 2-1/2 months in a Lashkar-e-Taiba training camp in 2001-02.

In an interview, Bruguiere said he was convinced Lashkar-e-Taiba, first set up to fight India in its part of the divided Himalayan region of Kashmir, had become part of an international network tied to al-Qaeda. "Lashkar-e-Taiba is no longer a Pakistani movement with only a Kashmir political or military agenda. Lashkar-e-Taiba is a member of al-Qaeda. Lashkar-e-Taiba has decided to expand violence worldwide," he told Reuters.
That's pretty much a given, isn't it? They provide training facilities and cadres for al-Qaeda. Three of them were arrested in Bangla in today's news plotting and kaboom the U.S. embassy in Dhaka in an expression of the Bangla people's outrage at our existence...
He was "very, very anxious about the situation" in Pakistan, where militants are staging a series of bloody urban attacks to avenge a government offensive against their strongholds. "The problem right now is to know if the Pakistanis have sufficient power to control the situation," he said.
They don't. If they change their ways they might in the future, but they're not really changing their ways. They're trying to go after the Pak Taliban but not the al-Qaeda infrastructure or the Afghan Taliban infrastructure in Balochistan and North Wazoo.
The problem was also "to know if all the members of the military forces and the ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence agency) are playing the same game. I am not sure," he added.
I'm sure they're not, and I'm also sure that the ones who aren't are not "rogue."
Pakistan has long been accused of giving covert support to Lashkar-e-Taiba, which was blamed for last year's attack on Mumbai in which 166 people were killed. It denies the allegation and has banned the organisation.
But Hafiz Saeed isn't in jug, the charges against him were dropped and he never did more than house arrest. Pak military trainers provided training and logistical assistance the the Mumbai killers. And LeT is about as "defunct" as I am, maybe less so.
New form of terrorism: Bruguiere said he became aware of the changing nature of international terrorism while investigating attacks in Paris in the mid-1990s by the Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA). These included an attempt to hijack a plane from Algiers to Paris in 1994 and crash it into the Eiffel Tower -- a forerunner of the Sept 11, 2001 attacks. The plane was diverted to Marseilles and stormed by French security forces.

This new style of international terrorism was quite unlike militant groups he had investigated in the past, with their pyramidal structures and political objectives. "After 1994/1995, like viruses, all the groups have been spreading on a very large scale all over the world, in a horizontal way and even a random way," he said.
It doesn't cost much to be a terrorist. The November 14th-Red Brigades-Baader Meinhof model works perfectly well for small-scale operations, and even big blow-outs like killing Aldo Moro, if you're willing to take the casualties. Note that Jemaah Islamiyah, for instance, was effectively wiped out after the Bali bombings.
An early encounter with Lashkar-e-Taiba came while he was investigating shoe-bomber Richard Reid, who tried to set off explosives on a transatlantic flight from Paris in 2001. This investigation led to a man, who Bruguiere said was the Lashkar-e-Taiba's representative in Paris, and who was suspected of helping Reid -- an accusation he denied. Bruguiere said the link to Reid was not proved in court.

"Willie Brigitte quickly understood that Sajid Mir belonged to the regular Pakistan army. The Toyota pick-up which took them to the training camp passed through four army checkpoints without being stopped."
Brigitte, a Frenchman originally from France's Caribbean department of Guadeloupe, had gone to Pakistan shortly after Sept 11 to try to reach Afghanistan. Unable to make it, he had been sent to a Lashkar centre outside Lahore. A man named Sajid Mir became his handler. "He quickly understood that Sajid belonged to the regular Pakistan army," wrote Bruguiere. After 1-1/2 months, he was taken with four other trainees, two British and two Americans, to a Lashkar camp in the hills in Punjab province. The Toyota pick-up which took them there passed through four army checkpoints without being stopped.

During his 2-1/2 months stay at the camp, Bruguiere says, Brigitte realised the instructors were soldiers on detachment. Military supplies were dropped by army helicopters. Brigitte said he and other foreigners were forced four times to leave the camp and move further up into the hills to avoid being caught by CIA officers. They were believed to be checking if Pakistan had kept to a deal under which the Americans turned a blind eye to Lashkar camps in Punjab provided no foreigners were trained there. In return, Bruguiere said, Pakistan under then president Pervez Musharraf helped track down leaders of al-Qaeda.

Double standards: Western countries were at the time accused by India of double standards in tolerating Pakistani support for Kashmir-focused organisations while pushing it to crack down on militant groups which threatened Western interests. Diplomats say that attitude has since changed, particularly after bombings in London in 2005 highlighted the risks of "home-grown terrorism" in Britain linked to militant groups based in Pakistan's Punjab province.

After leaving the camp accompanied by Sajid, Brigitte was sent back to France. Sajid then ordered him to fly to Australia where he joined a cell later accused of plotting attacks there. Tipped off by French police, Brigitte was deported from Australia in 2003 and convicted by a French court of links to terrorism.

Bruguiere said he had personally questioned Brigitte in the presence of his lawyer to check his testimony. Information provided by Brigitte was also crosschecked by French police based on mobile phone and e-mail traffic. Bruguiere went to Pakistan himself in 2006 as part of his investigations into the deaths of 11 Frenchmen in a bombing outside a hotel in Karachi in 2002. He stepped down as France's best-known counter-terrorism expert in 2007 and now represents the EU on the Terrorist Finance Tracking Programme in Washington.
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Europe
Brigitte in court for nuclear plot
2007-02-06
A FRENCH Muslim convert suspected of plotting to attack an Australian nuclear power station goes on trial on terrorism charges in a Paris court today.

Willy Brigitte faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted of association with criminals involved in a terrorist enterprise by the main Paris criminal court.

Prosecutors allege Brigitte, 38, and Sajid Mir, his co-accused who will be tried in absentia, considered targeting a nuclear power station or another high-profile facility near Sydney.

"He will plead his innocence," Brigitte's lawyer Jean-Claude Durimel said. "He denies being a terrorist, a potential terrorist, or having prepared any attack whatsoever or wheresoever."

Brigitte has spent almost 3-1/2 years in preventive detention since he was extradited to France in October 2003 following his arrest in Australia.

The case against Brigitte is based on documents found at his Sydney home, an investigation by Australian authorities into suspects linked to the Frenchman and testimony to French police by an Islamic militant, who later withdrew his allegations.

Australia's chief spy said Brigitte had been "almost certainly involved" in activities aimed at harming the country. Australia has been targeted by militant Islamic groups because of its role alongside US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"Group of campers"

At the time of his arrest, Brigitte was working in a local restaurant and was married to Melanie Brown, a former Australian soldier and also a convert to Islam.

Brigitte, who comes from the French Caribbean territory of Guadeloupe, told French police he had gone to Australia to rebuild his life after turning his back on radical Islam.

But Australian authorities said a search of his Sydney home produced documents linking him to Pakistani Islamic radicals recruiting volunteers to fight in Kashmir, disputed by India and Pakistan.

According to the French investigation, Brigitte travelled to Yemen in 1998 and 1999, and then to Pakistan, staying in fundamentalist religious centres.

Back in France, they say he led the so-called "group of campers" that conducted military-style training in Fontainebleau Forest near Paris and the Normandy region in the late 1990s.

Several members of the group were among those convicted in May 2005 of providing logistical support to the assassins of Ahmad Shad Masood, the leader of the Northern Alliance killed on the eve of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

Two group members died fighting with al Qaeda in Afghanistan and a third was captured by U.S. forces and held without trial in the U.S. military jail at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
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Down Under
Aussie hard boyz LeT trained
2005-11-09
London : At least two of the 17 men arrested in raids in Melbourne and Sydney on Tuesday were trained at camps in Pakistan run by the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

They are also said to have been in contact with 7/7 suicide bomber Shehzad Tanweer.

Two of the Australian suspects have also been linked to the LeT and al-Qaeda suspect Willy Brigitte, who was captured after French and Australian security services foiled a plot to bomb Australia two years ago.

Australian authorities said yesterday they had prevented a catastrophic terror attack, and police said more arrests were likely. Officers seized chemicals, weapons, computers and backpacks.

Police, however, declined to identify the possible targets, but there have been previous reports of suspects carrying out surveillance on stations, Sydney’s Opera House and Harbour Bridge, and the Melbourne Stock Exchange, reports the Daily News.

Abdul Nacer Benbrika, a radical Muslim cleric, was charged yesterday with masterminding the latest plot.

Benbrika, also known as Abu Bakr, is known in Australia as an enthusiastic supporter of Osama bin Laden and has said that although he is against the killing of innocent people, he could not discourage his students from travelling to Afghanistan or Pakistan to train in terrorist camps.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard has already issued a warning about a possible terror attack in the country.

“This country has never been immune from a possible terrorist attack. That remains the situation today and it will be tomorrow,” the paper quoted Howard, as saying.

Australian police and intelligence services have long suspected that LeT is operating in the country. Earlier this year, they raided four homes in Melbourne after a ten-month investigation uncovered a plot to attack major landmarks.

Mick Keelty, head of the Australian federal police, is reported to have said that some militants were known to have trained with terrorist groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
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Down Under
Man accused of lying to A.S.I.O faces court
2005-08-16
A MAN accused of lying to ASIO about his alleged links with French terrorist suspect Willy Brigitte has appeared in a Sydney court. Abdul Rakid Hasan, 35, is charged with two counts of making misleading statements under ASIO questioning in 2003. Hasan helped Brigitte, whom he knew as "Jamal", to find accommodation in south-western Sydney three times, according to an Australian Federal Police (AFP) statement tendered to Downing Centre Local Court today. Brigitte was deported to France in 2003.

Hasan had 23 telephone conversations with Brigitte between June 12 and September 29, 2003, at his workplace, the Indo-Malay Halal Butchery in Lakemba, the AFP statement said. But Hasan said when he was questioned under an ASIO warrant in November 2003 that he had spoken to "Jamal" about three times during that period, the statement said. The court heard that Hasan also denied arranging accommodation for Jamal or giving him assistance in Sydney between May and October 2003. "The statement was misleading because Hasan knew that he had helped arrange accommodation at three different premises in Sydney, and had given assistance to Jamal during that period," tendered documents said.
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Down Under
World's Top Terrorist Hunter Visits Australia
2005-07-18
MELBOURNE, July 17 (Bernama) --The world's leading terrorist hunter is on a secret mission in Sydney to investigate Australian links to global terrorism. French judge Jean-Louis Bruguiere and his team of anti-terror investigators arrived last week to hold talks with Australian security agents and terror suspects, according to The Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

Judge Bruguiere will meet Attorney-General Phillip Ruddock tomorrow and counter-terrorism officers from the Australian Federal Police later in the week. The judge and his team want to examine Australian and Southeast Asian links to global terrorism.

Judge Bruguiere, 60, has been at the forefront of the war on terror for 20 years and has spent the past 18 months interrogating Frenchman Willy Brigitte for his alleged involvement in the plot to bomb Sydney. Earlier last week, he was in Sydney meeting with the New South Wales state's counter-terrorism task force and the Department of Public Prosecutions to discuss the Brigitte investigation. According to the newspaper,

Judge Bruguiere made a formal request to Australian authorities earlier this year to interrogate jailed Australian terrorist Jack Roche in a Perth jail, and Brigitte's alleged accomplice, Faheem Lodhi.Roche, who met Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan in 1997, has offered to provide information to authorities and testify against alleged terrorists in foreign courts in return for a more lenient sentence.

Dubbed by the French as Le Cowboy, Judge Bruguiere is best known for tracking down international terrorist Carlos the Jackal in 1994 and foiling an attack during the 1998 soccer World Cup in France. He is keen for other countries to adopt a French-style system, enabling authorities to hold a suspect for up to two years without charge.
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Down Under
Witness confused at Brigitte sighting
2005-02-17
He was sure he saw a suspected Sydney terrorist meet the Frenchman Willy Brigitte at a Lakemba house, a court heard yesterday. But Rashid Ahmad, a Crown witness in Faheem Khalid Lodhi's committal hearing, had given police a different version - that did not include Brigitte.

Mr Ahmad admitted his recollection of events at the house shared by Brigitte, Ahmad's friend Ashid Altaf and others in mid-2003 was hazy and conflicting. He also wrongly identified Brigitte, who has allegedly named Lodhi as the Australian contact for an al-Qaeda-linked group, in Australian Federal Police photographs.

Mr Ahmad told the court the man was "the Pakistani", then he said it was "the Bangladeshi". Later, under cross-examination by Phillip Boulten, SC, Mr Ahmad agreed it was Brigitte.

"I'm sorry, maybe I made a mistake. This one ... is the French man," he said.

Lodhi faces nine terrorism-related charges for allegedly planning terrorist attacks on three Sydney military sites and the national electricity grid.

Mr Ahmad told the Central Local Court hearing he saw Lodhi meet Brigitte at the house in Boorea Avenue, Lakemba.

"They shake hands with that French man and I ask them, 'Is your friend?' and they said 'Yes'."

He said he was referring to a Pakistani man called Faheem and a Bangladeshi he knew from a butchery in Lakemba. He then admitted he wrongly told police that Lodhi had chastised him for not attending the mosque when it may have been the Bangladeshi.

Then he said he could not remember which it was. Mr Boulten said: "It seems that your memory is not very good about these issues. Do you accept that?"

He replied: "Yes".

You've got some hazy recollection about these people being at the unit, don't you? ... It could well be that you got things mixed up in your mind. Do you accept that? - Yes.

He said he met Lodhi at the house twice, although he had told police it was once.

The hearing was adjourned until May.
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Down Under
Accused 'had maps, photos'
2004-12-14
A SYDNEY man accused of planning terrorist attacks in Australia had maps of the national electricity network, aerial photographs of defence installations and instructions for making explosives, a court was told today. Architect Faheem Khalid Lodhi, 34, faces nine charges, including committing acts in preparation for a terrorist act and collecting documents connected with terrorism.

As his committal hearing began in Central Local Court today, Prosecutor Richard Maidment, SC, told the court that in October 2001 Lodhi had acted "in an apparent official capacity" at a training camp in Lahore, Pakistan, operated by banned terrorist organisation Lashkar-e-Taiba. "The camp specialised in urban warfare," Mr Maidment said. In 2003, after returning to Australia, Lodhi allegedly helped set up French terror suspect Willy Brigitte in a Sydney home and with a mobile phone which was, like his own, registered in a false name. The court was told that before Brigitte was deported to France in October 2003, he and Lodhi communicated regularly with each other and with a contact in Pakistan known as Sajid. Mr Maidment said the association was "connected with the preparation of one or more terrorist acts in Australia". Lodhi also allegedly used a false name to buy maps of the national electricity network and authorities found 15 handwritten pages containing instructions for making explosives in his office. Lodhi also allegedly inquired about purchasing chemicals, a number of which were also listed in the written instructions as ingredients for explosives, Mr Maidment said.

On October 25 last year, Lodhi was seen depositing an A4 envelope in a rubbish bin at a public reserve. It was found to contain 37 pages of aerial photographs of defence establishments HMAS Penguin, Holsworthy Army Base and Victoria Barracks. Mr Maidment told the court Lodhi had downloaded the photographs from the internet in connection with a terrorist act "involving the bombing of one or more establishments". The hearing continues.
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Down Under
Aussie Extremist Muslims seek Saudi funds
2004-06-05
An extremist Australian Islamic group with links to several accused terrorists is trying to raise millions of dollars in Saudi Arabia to expand its operations in Sydney. The group operates from the controversial Haldon Street prayer hall in Lakemba but is fund-raising among cashed-up Saudi sympathisers to buy a nearby unused mosque. A Sun-Herald investigation has found the Sydney group used emails, mobile-phone text messages and faxes to tell rich Saudis that if they couldn’t raise $2.65 million by the end of July the mosque could be bought by Jews or Buddhists.The horror!

The group is headed by Sheik Abdul Zoud, a radical cleric whose prayer hall was attended by alleged terrorists Willy Brigitte, Bilal Khazal, Saleh Jamal, Mamdouh Habib, Faheem Khalid Lodhi and Izhar ul-Haque. Extremist clerics in Saudi Arabia were asked to back the fundraising. They included Safar al Hawali, who justified the September 11 attacks on religious grounds, and Sheik Aaed ben Maqbul al-Qurni , who has urged Islamic states to get nuclear weapons.
The move has rung alarm bells in security agencies. A spokesman for Attorney-General Philip Ruddock said it was known the Haldon Street group was trying to raise large amounts of money in the Middle East. But he could neither confirm nor deny whether the group’s fundraising activities were being monitored. "If they are contacting, or in discussions with, people who espouse violence, it would be seen as entirely inappropriate or not helpful for the image of Islam in Australia," the spokesman said.

Terrorism expert Neil Fergus of Intelligent Risks said security agencies could not ignore an expansion of Sheik Zoud’s prayer hall group. "There are questions over Sheik Zoud and his connections to those who patronise his prayer centre," Mr Fergus said. "What assurances can he give that he will preach Islam as the prophet wrote it instead of the al-Qaeda version?"
I’ve been wanting to say this for a long time...And then his lips fell off! ;)
Community leaders said the fund-raising was unnecessary as the prayer hall was only 10 minutes’ walk from the largest mosque in Sydney, at Lakemba, run by the leading Imam Sheik Taj el-Den Al-Hilaly.
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Down Under
Sydney terrorist accused of targeting energy supplies
2004-04-23
After a six-month investigation across three countries, police have arrested the alleged mastermind of a planned major terrorist attack on Australia’s energy supplies. Faheem Lodhi, 34, of Punchbowl, was charged with seven terrorist offences yesterday. Along with the deported Frenchman Willy Brigitte, he is believed to be the nucleus of a bomb plot which authorities believe would have centred on Sydney. Lodhi is accused of having sought information on the nation’s energy supplies, including electricity and oil. Lodhi’s arrest comes a week after Pakistani-born university student Izhar ul-Haque was charged with training with the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) terrorist group. It also follows admissions by Brigitte - who has been linked to the top ranks of al-Qaeda - that Lodhi was the alleged Sydney commander of a developing terrorist cell. To Brigitte, Lodhi was known as Abu Hamza.

Central Local Court heard yesterday that ASIO had observed Lodhi, an architect, dumping documents in a bin. The retrieved material had included photographs downloaded from the internet showing the layout of the Sydney-based military facilities Holsworthy Army Base, Garden Island Naval Base, Victoria Barracks and the HMAS Penguin base in Balmoral. The Joint Counter Terrorism Task Force has yet to establish the specific target for the first strike. Lodhi’s lawyer, Stephen Hopper, told the court his client was mild-mannered, married and a professional architect. "He has never expressed views he hates people who are non-Muslim. He loves Australia and would not want to hurt any Australia citizen in any way."

Yesterday’s arrest is the culmination of a long investigation in Australia, Pakistan and France. During interrogation in Paris, Brigitte identified a photograph of Lodhi and described him as the representative of LeT in Australia. He also revealed details of a network planning an attack. The French judge alerted Australian security forces, urging an investigation into what he concluded were plans for a "terrorist act of great size in Australia". Brigitte also told French authorities that he had attended an LeT training camp in Pakistan where he met a Pakistani man, Sajid, who later organised and paid for his trip to Australia. He said Sajid had ordered him to link up with Lodhi. Brigitte recalled Lodhi telling him to expect an unnamed house guest at Brigitte’s Wiley Park flat, possibly an explosives expert. The French dossier says Lodhi had the keys to the flat and would organise "meetings there with the brothers".
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Down Under
Brigitte's cleric sez Binny's innocent
2004-03-23
Abdul Salam Zoud, the Lakemba imam who presided over the Islamic union of French terrorism suspect Willy Brigitte and former Australian soldier Melanie Brown, still doesn't buy the Osama bin Laden theory. "He's not a terrorist in my view. I don't believe yet he did what the Americans said. I swear by God, by Allah . . . I reject [bin Laden's culpability in the attacks on the US on September 11, 2001]."

A classified dossier compiled by France's anti-terrorism judge Jean-Louis Bruguiere names Shiek Zoud as the chief recruiter for a terrorist network operating in Australia. The headquarters for this jihad is supposedly the Haldon Street prayer hall, where Sheik Zoud is the spiritual head. He is not the only one questioning the central claims in the French dossier, published in The Daily Telegraph yesterday. Brigitte's lawyer, Jean-Claude Durimel, says allegations his client knew of any terrorist plot to attack Australia were the result of "a lot of imagination. I was at all the interrogations of Mr Brigitte and he has never said he was aware of a project for an attack or whatever."

Sheik Zoud moved on to sermonising, under the Hills Hoist in his south-west Sydney backyard, about Australians' need to work together to fight terrorism. Threatening the cold shoulder for reporters who misquoted or took his words out of context, he answered questions put to him as follows:
Do you think there are any terrorist cells, planning or activities in Sydney?
"No, I don't know anyone. If I know I will tell the government. Do you know why we have to work together to save this country? Because altogether we're living here. It's not good for us, for you, for anyone living here to do anything bad to this government. We left our countries because of all of the problems there, and we move to this safe country to live the rest of our life. I'm against all terrorism over the world. I'm against all terrorism who kill civilian people. Let the Australian people relax. Why everyone make the Australian people scared from the Muslims?"

Are you being investigated by ASIO or the Australian Federal Police?
"They came to me once and asked me a few questions because there other sect of Muslims speak something against us and they come and make sure is it correct or not."

Did they ask about Willy Brigitte?
"No . . . because I didn't do anything wrong. I saw that man Willy Brigitte once, because I'm authorised celebrant. He ask me and I did it, after I check everything. Maybe less than hour."

Abu Dahdah?
"I don't know who is he. Do you think every Muslim knows every Muslim over the world. Do you know all the Christians?"

Why do you think ASIO is interested in you?
"Ask them."
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Down Under
Brigitte linked to Madrid bombings, 9/11
2004-03-22
French investigators interrogating Willy Brigitte have established he had connections with the organisers of the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Centre as well as the March 11 Madrid terror attacks. He has told them he was sent to Sydney to allegedly help a locally based terror group to "prepare a terrorist act of great size". Brigitte's "mission" was to look after an explosives expert from Chechnya who would be smuggled into Australia posing as a fan of the Georgian team in the Rugby World Cup.

But Keysar Trad, a spokesman for the Lebanese Australian Muslims Association, said Brigitte's alleged admissions to French counter-terrorism agents could have been the result of intense interrogation and drug use. In an interview with The Daily Telegraph today, Brigitte's Australian wife Melanie Brown said he had admitted to smoking marijuana "as a facade to trick Australian police".
"Yeah! Like, that's why we dunnit, man! Just t'fool the coppers!"
"Marijuana users escape into their imagination and have hallucinations," Mr Trad said. "His wife says he fools the cops uses marijuana regularly. We haven't seen anything to substantiate these allegations, but for someone who's a heavy marijuana user, you wonder whether he just couldn't work things out after the intense interrogation."

Earlier today, Attorney-General Phillip Ruddock said ASIO had neither confirmed nor denied it had launched a search for the Chechen explosive expert. "I can't comment on the status of ongoing inquiries. I can't confirm or deny the status of them," he said. Mr Ruddock said Australia was not about to adopt an approach like that in France where investigators routinely revealed details of their inquiries. "They (the French) have a different system which they operate which gives them different powers. "It may suit France's circumstances. It wouldn't be in our view helpful to pursue that approach here." Mr Ruddock said anyone seeking to recruit or train terrorists in Australia would be dealt with by the authorities.

Brigitte, now being held in Paris's Chateau d'If Fleury-Merogis prison, has told French investigators about alleged terrorist activities in Sydney by Australian-based terrorists. Australian and French authorities are trying to verify his statements. He has claimed a terror network - at least in an informal sense - is operating in western Sydney and is charged with recruiting people for jihad operations against non-Muslims. He has named several people and the man he claims is at the centre of the operation and who is believed by French investigators to be connected with some of the most notorious terrorists in the world. Abdul Salam Mohammed Zoud, the imam who presided over Brigitte's wedding to Melanie Brown last August, has been named as the chief recruiter of Australia's jihad network. In Sydney yesterday, Sheik Zoud denied he was the "chief recruiter". "I have no part in it," he said.
"Nope. Nope. I'm just a simple holy man! Who y'gonna believe? Me? Or some guy in the calaboose?"
In the dossier, Judge Bruguiere requests a joint investigation by the two countries into Brigitte and the foiled Sydney plot. Brigitte's terror network placed him in close contact with the leaders of the jihad against Jews and Western interests in France, Belgium, Britain, Spain, Australia and a dangerous terror cell in the US. He has also been linked to terror groups that organised the assassination of an Afghan commander. The dossier portrays him as a link figure in the world terror network with connections to groups behind the March 11 Madrid massacre and September 11. The French request to Australia says Brigitte's potential targets included Lucas Heights nuclear reactor, the Australian Army's administrative compound at Victoria Barracks and the Perth headquarters of Australia's SAS regiment. The French believe Brigitte was also targeting US military bases, the Pine Gap intelligence base and nuclear sites. He was found with a map of Australian and US military and nuclear installations. The dossier also lists the names of the people claimed by Brigitte to be leading figures of Sydney's Islamic terror network. At its heart is Sheik Zoud, the spiritual head of the Haldon St prayer hall that for the past year has been under surveillance by the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation.

According to a request for judicial assistance from Australian authorities by French anti-terrorist judge Jean-Louis Bruguiere, Sheik Zoud has connections with terror chiefs stretching from Virginia in the US to London and Madrid. In the request he is named as "the recruiter in Australia of volunteers for the jihad, operating from the Mousalla mosque of Lakemba". Sheik Zoud is said to have links to Abu Dahdah, the jailed kingpin of a Spanish terror cell alleged to have helped plan the September 11 attacks. Dahdah was also the mentor of Jamal Zougam, chief suspect in the Madrid train bombings that killed 202 people in Europe's worst terrorist atrocity earlier this month. CIA investigations into a major terror cell in Virginia have established Sheik Zoud was regularly in contact with the cell's alleged chief recruiter Ali Timimi. Brigitte's commander in the Sydney network is named as Faheem Khalid Lodhi, also known as Hamza. According to Judge Bruguiere's letter to his Australian judicial counterparts, Brigitte's job in Sydney was to harbour a Chechnyan explosives expert, believed to be Abu Salah. Brigitte met Salah during his jihad training at the Faisalabad, Pakistan terror camp of the al-Qaeda-linked extremist group Lashkar-e-Taiba in September 2001.
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Down Under
Oz terror suspect enjoys free rein
2004-02-15
A week after a Pakistani-born man was named publicly as a terror suspect he is still free, walking the streets of Sydney. And it is almost four months since anti-terror forces searched the man’s home in south-western Sydney, along with those of six others who were identified as key associates of terror suspect Willy Brigitte, who is in a French jail cell. But despite accusations that the man, named as Abu Hamza, was part of a group allegedly planning a terror attack in Sydney, police are powerless to put him behind bars. The Federal Government says it cannot detain him as he has not broken any law. Hamza has cut off his phone and moved house several times since he came to the attention of ASIO. His lawyer, Stephen Hopper, said Hamza denies being involved in any terrorist group. Mr Hopper said Hamza does admit to helping Brigitte settle in Sydney when he arrived here in May 2003, but said he did it as he is obliged to do so under the Muslim custom of helping a traveller.
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