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Archive for September, 2006

Fertiliser claim in terror trial

Monday, September 25th, 2006

BBC News
September 25, 2006

One of the seven men accused of plotting to bomb UK targets told the Old Bailey the half-ton of fertiliser he bought was destined for Pakistan.

Anthony Garcia, 24, said co-accused Omar Khyam asked him to buy 600kg of ammonium nitrate, and that it was to be shipped to Pakistan.

He also said he was a rap fan who had been likened to Ali G as a teenager.

The seven men were arrested when the fertiliser was found stored in a west London depot. They deny all charges.

Asked why he bought the fertiliser, Mr Garcia told the court: “Because Khyam asked me to. It was to be shipped to Pakistan.”

He said he heard no more about the fertiliser until his arrest four months later in March 2004.

He also told the court he was a rap and basketball fan and that “people used to take me as some kind of Ali G character,” when he was a teenager.

But he said people began to respect him after he started raising money for Muslims in Kashmir.

Modelling ambitions

Mr Garcia also told the court that he had wanted to be a model before his arrest, and had changed his name shortly before from Rahman Adam.

This was both to help his career and to avoid repaying a loan he had taken out.

He had been brought up as part of a large family of Algerians coming to east London from Africa when he was five.

The family were not religious, but he became interested in Islam in his late teens as he found he was a successful fundraiser.

Asked by defence counsel Matthew Ryder: “Do you think of yourself as English or Algerian?” Mr Garcia replied: “English”.

He condemned the 11 September attacks in America and Osama Bin Laden, saying the killing of innocents was against his religion.

Mr Garcia said he was and is only concerned in the Kashmiri cause, did not understand the politics of Iraq and Afghanistan and did not agree with the Taleban.

He had previously wanted to get military training in Pakistan in case he was ever called to fight for Kashmir but was turned down for being “white”.

Last week Mr Khyam cut his evidence short before being questioned about the fertiliser, after telling the court Pakistani secret services had “had words” with his family.


Terror charges

The prosecution alleges the men were part of a cell linked to al-Qaeda which was targeting utilities, the Bluewater shopping centre in Kent, and the Ministry of Sound nightclub in London.

Omar Khyam, 24; his brother Shujah Mahmood, 19; Waheed Mahmood, 34; and Jawad Akbar, 23, all from Crawley, Sussex; Salahuddin Amin, 31, from Luton, Bedfordshire; Anthony Garcia, 24, of Barkingside, east London; and Nabeel Hussain, 21, of Horley, Surrey, deny conspiring to cause explosions likely to endanger life between January 1, 2003 and March 31, 2004.

Mr Khyam, Mr Garcia and Mr Hussain also deny a charge under the Terrorism Act of possessing 1,300lb (600kg) of ammonium nitrate fertiliser for terrorism.

Mr Khyam and Shujah Mahmood further deny possessing aluminium powder for terrorism.

The trial continues.

Source

Top secret: Banff security meeting attracted U.S., Mexico officials

Thursday, September 21st, 2006

CBC News
Last Updated: Thursday, September 21, 2006 | 9:15 AM MT

A North American security meeting was secretly held in Banff last week, attracting high-profile officials from the United States, Mexico and Canada.

The North American Forum was hosted with the help of the Canada West Foundation and the Canadian Council of Chief Executives.

…”We’re talking about such an important thing, we’re talking about the integration of Canada into the United States. For them to hold this meeting in secret and to make every effort to avoid anybody learning about it, right away you’ve got to be hugely concerned,” Hurtig said.

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Terror accused refuses to discuss links to Pakistan secret service, family threatened

Monday, September 18th, 2006

Flashback: London terror plotter was ‘hardened’ in ISI camp

The Times UK
September 18, 2006

The trial over an alleged plot by a terror cell to bomb Britain was suddenly halted today when a key defendant refused to continue giving evidence, claiming that security forces had visited his family in Pakistan.

Omar Khyam, 24, who is accused with six others of planning a bombing campaign of Britain with more than half a tonne of fertiliser explosive, said that he was now worried about the safety of his family, the Old Bailey heard.

Last week the jury was told by Mr Khyam how he had gone to Pakistan to receive military training.

During his two days in the witness box Mr Khyam said: “The ISI (Pakistan’s Intelligence service) was setting up training camps in what we called Free Kashmir, funding it (them) with money and weapons, and people that would train people, and logistical supplies, everything. It was because Pakistan didn’t want their soldiers dying.”

He described how he went to a training camp in Pakistan in January 2000 and was taught about guerrilla warfare. He said that people were selected by the ISI who worked with Islamic groups.

The jury were due to hear today about the fertiliser that was discovered in a West London storage depot. Mr Khyam had denied planning operations for English targets, but had yet to explain why he allegedly bought it.

Asked by his counsel, Joel Bennathan, whether he had bought the fertiliser with the help of others, he said he would not go on.

Mr Khyam, who was wearing a yellow open-neck shirt, said: “Before we go on to that topic, I just want to say the ISI in Pakistan has had words with my family relating to what I have been saying about them.

“I think they are worried I might reveal more about them, so right now, as much as I want to clarify matters, the priority for me has to be the safety of my family so I am going to stop.

“I am not going to discuss anything related to the ISI any more or the evidence.”

The court was adjourned for lawyers to consider the situation.

After more than an hour, the court resumed for the judge to warn Mr Khyam that the jury could draw inferences from his refusal to continue.

Sir Michael Astill told the defendant: “If you refuse to answer questions, the jury may draw such inferences as appears proper from your failure to do so.”

Mr Khyam answered “yes” when asked if he understood.

The jury was then told to leave the courtroom. The case was later adjourned until tomorrow.

Mr Khyam, his brother Shujah Mahmood, 19, Waheed Mahmood, 34, and Jawad Akbar, 23, all from Crawley, Sussex, Salahuddin Amin, 31, from Luton, Bedfordshire, Anthony Garcia, 24, of Ilford, east London, and Nabeel Hussain, 21, of Horley, Surrey, deny conspiring to cause explosions likely to endanger life between January 1, 2003 and March 31, 2004.

Mr Khyam, Mr Garcia and Mr Hussain also deny a charge under the Terrorism Act of possessing 1,300lb (600kg) of ammonium nitrate fertiliser for terrorism.

Mr Khyam and Shujah Mahmood further deny possessing aluminium powder for terrorism.

Source

London terror plotter was ‘hardened’ in ISI camp

Sunday, September 17th, 2006

The Tribune of India
September 17, 2006

The much dreaded ISI-Al Qaeda-Taliban-Kashmiri militant nexus has come to light in a London courtroom where the hearing in the March 2004 fertiliser bomb terror trial is on.

One of the main accused in the trial, Omar Khyam has made a few startling statements in his defence that clearly establish a growing merger of Al-Qaida and the Kashmiri militants under the aegis of Pakistan’s Inter- Services Intelligence (ISI).

Khyam, 24-year-old British Muslim, told the court on Thursday about his radicalisation process after a visit to an ISI-backed Pakistani training camp for militants fighting in Kashmir and a trip to Afghanistan to meet the Taliban.

Khyam was arrested along with six others including his brother Shujah Mahmood in 2004 after fertiliser explosives were found in a storage depot in west London. He and his associates, alleged to belong to terror cell of Al-Qaida, have been charged of plotting to bomb nightclubs and other places in United Kingdom.

In his testimony, Khyam stated how he came to know of the fighting in Kashmir between India and Pakistan with the ISI recruiting and training irregular mujahideen.

A Guardian report quoted Khyam as saying: “I wanted to dedicate myself to helping Kashmiri Muslims, and go to Pakistan for military training”. In January 2000 he ran away to Pakistan and joined an ISI-run training camp for militants in the mountains near Rawalpindi, when he was just 18-year-old.

“They told me everything I needed to know for fighting guerrilla warfare in Kashmir. That included training with AK-47 rifles, rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns as well as reconnaissance and sniper techniques,” he added.

After his training, he visited Kabul where he was impressed by the Taliban.

“They were soft, kind and humble, but harsh with their enemies”, Khyam told court.

But after the defeat of the Taliban by the NATO forces who took over Kabul, Khyam and his colleagues decided to return to their native countries with an aim to “establish an Islamic State”.

Khyam’s deliberations in the court, where he narrated about his transformation from an ardent fan of the English football team to a radical terrorist, who “was happy” when the twin towers of World Trade Centre collapsed on 9/11, have baffled many here.

Narrating his ideological journey, Khyam said: “I was born here and felt allegiance” but later joined an ISI-training camp for mujahideens in Kashmir, since ‘I wanted to help Kashmiri Muslims”.

Source

Canadians who trust our secret police should think again

Friday, September 1st, 2006

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
September 1, 2006

An Innovative Research Group poll taken after the early June bust of “the Toronto 17” is cause for deep concern. The poll found that 62% of Canadians agreed with the proposition that without national security all other rights of Canadians were simply theoretical.

This was the argument presented by federal lawyers before the Supreme Court in an effort to defend the constitutionality of the use of “security certificates”– i.e., the right of the secret police to incarcerate suspected terrorists for an indefinite time without laying charges or proceeding to trial.

Another 40% of Canadians declared a willingness to see our civil liberties eroded in the name of national security. One in three expressed worries that they could be personally victimized by terrorist acts, and one in four felt that they or someone close to them could have been killed or injured by the actions of “the Toronto 17.”

The campaign of terror and apprehension by our secret police and the Harper government is working. Fear is stalking the land, infecting our democracy.

Fear, deliberately provoked and orchestrated, has always been a favourite tool of governments seeking to win public support for questionable, controversial policies. In this particular case, the Harper government chose to mount arguably the biggest peacetime combined police and military operation since the 1970 War Measures Act to round up a gang of hapless, abjectly stupid ideological zealots suffering from terrorist fantasies and delusions of grandeur. Based on the evidence so far reported on “the Toronto 17,” they would have difficulty successfully organizing a community soccer tournament.

Given the Harper government’s political agenda, Canadians should resist giving instant credence to unsubstantiated claims made by our secret police and Harper’s Public Safety Minister, Stockwell Day. That agenda involves stampeding a reluctant Canadian public into supporting the deployment of Canadian troops in Afghanistan and yielding to the U.S. government’s demands that Canada more actively join the Bush administration’s global “war on terror.”

Buoyed by his success in scaring Canadians with the spectre of home-grown terrorists, no matter how inept, Harper went on to persuade the frightened majority to support a massive $15 billion increased defence spending program billed as essential for our participation in this “war.” And this $15 billion was not earmarked for military tools for the defence of Canada, or for UN peacekeeping abroad, but rather for acquiring the military equipment needed for wars of aggression, invasion, and occupation of foreign countries.

Let us remember the lessons about our secret police so painfully learned during Canada’s last brush with terrorism and its suppression: the 1970 FLQ crisis and the invocation of the War Measures Act. Public hysteria was whipped up then, too, by leaked claims of the secret police and politicians that FLQ terrorists had infiltrated all key institutions in Quebec; that 3,000 armed FLQ terrorists were ready to begin an insurrection; that the FLQ had a “hit list” of 200 Quebec leaders marked for assassination; that the kidnappings of the British diplomat and the Quebec Labour Minister were but the first step in a revolutionary plot; that a massive bombing campaign was in the works; that there would be a bloodbath of executions followed by the installation of a provisional government in Quebec.

It was all a pack of lies, of course, but it led to a wave of arrests and violations of civil liberties focused in Quebec, but affecting suspected individuals and groups all across Canada. And the suppression enjoyed almost universal public support.

In the years after the FLQ “crisis,” Canadians learned how they had been manipulated by the secret police and politicians in power, thanks to Ottawa’s Royal Commission of Inquiry Into Certain Activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (the McDonald Commission) and Quebec’s Keeble Inquiry into Illegal Police Activities. These inquiries exposed the dirty tricks and illegal actions employed by the secret police against not only the FLQ, but the democratic sovereignty movement, as well as other individuals and groups on a list of “the politically suspect” (including MPs, election candidates, student groups, and trade unionists).

Seventeen past and present members of the RCMP’s Security Service were charged with 44 offences following the release of the Keeble Report (there would have been more, but the federal government stonewalled the Commission’s request for documents). The McDonald Commission also reported a long list of dirty tricks and illegal actions carried out by the secret police, though these did not result in charges and trials (and portions of the report have yet to be released). These included over 400 illegal break-ins, thefts of dynamite, theft of the membership list of the Parti Québécois, an act of arson, unauthorized mail openings, surveillance of MPs and candidates for office, investigations of the NDP’s Waffle group, illegal detentions involving psychological and physical violence to recruit informers, forging and releasing documents under the FLQ’s name calling for violence to win independence, the massive infiltration of the FLQ to the point where by 1972 secret police agents had a voting majority in the organization. The list goes on and on.

Most of the perpetrators of the dirty tricks and illegal activities among the ranks of the secret police were never charged, and those who were charged either received unconditional discharges upon pleading guilty, or the charges were later dropped. In other words, the secret police were, in practice, not subject to the laws of the land but could cynically violate them at will in the name of “national security.” As a result, the McDonald Royal Commission recommended that, in future, the police–including the secret police–cease all illegal activities, that mail openings and break-ins occur only under the oversight of a judge, and, allegedly most importantly, that the secret police be removed from the RCMP and that a civilian secret police agency be set up. In 1984, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) was accordingly established.

This was an entirely cosmetic move that smeared the RCMP, suggesting that the secret police got out of control due to failures of the RCMP’s command structure. This is nonsense. The secret police were doing what the secret police always do, and continue to do under the CSIS structure. And they were doing it under the political direction of the government of the day. Indeed, it can be reasonably argued that the RCMP’s command structure, history and culture may well have imposed a bit of restraint on the activities of the secret police, a restraint that is absent in CSIS. Testimony before the McDonald Commission revealed that some rather bizarre plots proposed by secret police zealots were denied authorization at senior levels. So there’s reason to trust CSIS even less than the RCMP’s former Security Service.

And what about the directive from the McDonald Commission that the police, including the secret police, always act within the law? Such a directive, if scrupulously heeded, would make it very tough for the secret police to do what secret police do. Well, that problem has been solved. There is a new “doublethink” law allowing the police to act illegally while allegedly upholding the law. If that sounds a bit Orwellian, that’s because it is: a law making breaking the law legal while enforcing the law.

This new so-called Immunity Law was passed in February 2002, and it allows police agents of all sorts to commit crimes in the line of duty. Any crime can be committed except those involving obstructing justice, sex crimes, and violence causing bodily harm (making violence that leaves no marks or breaks no bones perfectly legal). During 2004-05, as Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day recently admitted, many crimes were committed by police covered by the immunity statute.

It is now permissible for secret police agents to actively work with suspects, or with individuals and groups targeted for political reasons, in order to encourage violations of the new, draconian anti-terrorist law, even to the point of encouraging would-be terrorists to plan elaborate attacks. So all those illegal actions carried out by secret police in the 1960s and ‘70s that were condemned by two government inquiries would now be perfectly legal.

With the secret police now unconstrained by law, our democracy and our civil liberties are in big trouble. The next sensational terrorist bust could well involve a “sleeper cell” made up of a majority of secret police agents.

Source