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View Full Version : Court Hearing for Al-Qaeda’s ‘British Propagandists’


Niqaabis
24th April 2007, 07:11 PM
24/04/2007
Sean O’Neill

http://www.an-najwa.com/men.bmp

Violent al-Qaeda propaganda, including footage of the beheading of hostages, was distributed around the globe by computer by young men sitting in their bedrooms in Britain, a court heard yesterday.



Three men appeared before Woolwich Crown Court accused of inciting terrorism abroad. They were said to have a “close affiliation” with al-Qaeda in Iraq, the group founded by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.



Younis Tsouli, 23, Waseem Mughal, 24, and Tariq al-Daour, 21, allegedly played important roles in al-Qaeda’s “media war” and had massive quantities of films, audio recordings, books and documents promoting the extremist ideology of Osama bin Laden and global jihad.



Among the footage found in police raids on their homes in London and Kent were films of the beheading of the British engineer Kenneth Bigley as well as the executions of American, Korean, Japanese, Egyptian, Iraqi, Turkish and Bulgarian hostages.



The footage of Mr Bigley’s death was found in a computer file labelled “The throat slitting of the Briton who Blair and his people would not help”. Other video material showed him pleading for his life along with his fellow hostages, the Americans Jack Hensley and Eugene Armstrong.



Police also seized film of the beheadings in Iraq of the Americans Nick Berg and Paul Marshall Johnson Jr, and the murder in Pakistan of the US journalist Daniel Pearl. The videos contained scenes of hostages as their heads were severed.



Other films found on the men’s computers or on discs in their rooms included footage of suicide attacks in Iraq, the video wills of “martyrs” and stylised productions eulogising the 9/11 hijackers.



“Possession of this material is strong evidence of the depth of their adherence to the cause,” Mark Ellison, for the prosecution, told the court.



“Collecting it, providing links for others to obtain it, applauding it, defending it — as we say these defendants did — as well as making it available to a wide audience on websites is strong evidence of the approval of it and of the ideology it seeks to justify.”



Mr Tsouli had a Powerpoint presentation entitled “carbom-bzip” and another file containing video clips of the World Bank building and the US Capitol in Washington DC and the George Washington National Masonic Memorial.



A CD was found in the home of Mr Mughal containing a file giving instructions on how to make a suicide-bomb vest.



Mr al-Daour had a CD file entitled “special course in manufacturing explosives”, a document with instructions for firing a rocket-propelled grenade and a data file, “The Mujahidin Explosives Handbook”.



Mr Ellison said that the defendants, who were arrested in October 2005, were “intelligent young men” who appeared to lead normal lives.



“Behind the apparent normality of their daily lives and for at least a year before they were arrested, the truth is that each of these young men firmly believed in, supported and set about inciting others to follow an extreme ideology of violent holy war,” he said.



That incitement was carried out through the dissemination of propaganda attacking al-Qaeda’s enemies and praising its violent attacks and murders.



Mr Ellison said: “The effective recruitment of new adherents to the cause and the inciting of them to join in the fighting and killing and become mujahidin, if not also martyrs, is the very lifeblood of achieving the religious dominance that has its root in this ideology.



“The central importance of powerfully expressed and constructed media in that process, and having the means of distributing and pushing the message to those prepared to listen and likely to be persuaded to join in themselves, is at the very heart of advancing this ideology.



“This is the area in which these three defendants, we allege, were active. Each of them was adept at the use of computers and the internet and they each demonstrated by what they collected, by what they provided to others, by what they said on record on their computers, an avid adherence to the need for violent holy war.”



All three deny possession of documents or records likely to be of use to a person preparing an act of terrorism, and incitement to commit an act of terrorism outside Britain. Mr Tsouli and Mr Mughal deny a charge of conspiracy to murder which, the jury heard, was connected to a plot involving individuals in Bosnia.The trial continues.



The accused



Younis Tsouli, from Shepherds Bush, West London, was born in Morocco but was granted indefinite leave to remain in Britain two months before his arrest. He studied Information Technology and computer technology at Westminster College of Computing in 2001-03 and, according to his CV, was fluent in French and Arabic



Waseem Mughal lived with his family in Chatham, Kent, and is a biochemistry graduate from the University of Leicester. While a student, he ran the website of the university’s Islamic Society



Tariq al-Daour was born in the United Arab Emirates of Palestinian parents and became a British citizen in May 2004. Shortly before his arrest he had applied to study for a law degree

SOURCE: The Times

taken from http://www.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=20020

umm lina
25th April 2007, 05:41 AM
Another propaganda will take those accused to the usa for trial and they will end up in prison for life as usual...

Niqaabis
26th April 2007, 05:04 PM
26/04/2007

Three men helped to distribute films of beheadings and bomb-making instructions to be used for attacks on non-Muslims, a court has heard.


One of the young al-Qaeda followers was told to think about the suicide bombers in Iraq his online terrorist propaganda was inspiring, the court heard.


Younes Tsouli, 23, is one of three accused of distributing the films.


Mr Tsouli and Tariq Al-Daour, 21, both from west London, and Waseem Mughal, 24, from Kent, all deny terror charges.


Mr Tsouli told co-defendant Mr Mughal that he wanted to "stand in the trenches" in Iraq, Woolwich Crown Court heard.



'Media work'


Prosecutor Mark Ellison told the jury that in an online chat Mr Tsouli told Mr Mughal: "It sucks we are here and not there. But I suppose someone has to be here."


But Mr Mughal urged him to continue with his "media work" as it was "very, very important".


The footage is alleged to have included terrorist beheadings, bomb-making instructions and terrorism handbooks.


Mr Ellison said that Mr Mughal added: "A lot of the funding that the brothers are getting is coming because of the videos. Imagine how many have gone (to Iraq) after seeing the videos. Imagine how many have become shahid (martyrs)."


The prosecutor said Mr Tsouli, who holds a Moroccan passport, had recently been granted indefinite leave to remain in the UK at the time of his arrest.


In emails and chat room conversations, Mr Tsouli and Mr Mughal talked about the financial difficulties involved in constantly setting up new sites as others were "killed off", the jury heard.


Mr Tsouli told Mr Mughal he had been asked by "AQ", an acronym for al-Qaeda said Mr Ellison, to translate their official "e-book" into English.


The court also heard two men arrested in Bosnia for possessing a video thought to be a blueprint for attacks on "non-believers" in countries which had sent troops to Iraq may have been in contact with the men.


'Mujahideen badge'


One of those arrested in Bosnia, 21-year-old Swede Mirsad Bektasevic, had the men saved in a "buddy list" on his computer which allowed him to carry out encrypted conversations with them.


Mr Ellison said: "So what was it that brought the defendants and Bektasevic together? What was the common interest between them?"


He said messages obtained from Mr Tsouli's computer related to the design of a "mujahideen badge" needed before the anniversary of the 11 September attacks.



When Bektasevic was arrested in house near Sarajevo in October 2005, authorities found 18kg of explosives, electrical wiring, timing devices and detonators and a suicide bomber's belt loaded with explosives, the jury was told.


The jury was also shown the video officers recovered from the same house.


On the video, a voice was heard to say: "Here are the boys preparing for the attacks.


"They are showing us the stuff they are going to use for the attack. These boys are prepared to attack and Inshallah, God willing, they will attack Kuffar (non-believers) who are killing our brothers and Muslims in Iraq, in Afghanistan, Chechnya and many other countries."

The three men deny charges under the 2000 Terrorism Act of possessing documents or records likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.


The case continues.

SOURCE: BBC News

taken from http://www.cageprisoners.com/articles.php?id=20045

gag order
26th April 2007, 08:49 PM
Among the footage found in police raids on their homes in London and Kent were films of the beheading of the British engineer Kenneth Bigley as well as the executions of American, Korean, Japanese, Egyptian, Iraqi, Turkish and Bulgarian hostages.



Other films found on the men’s computers or on discs in their rooms included footage of suicide attacks in Iraq, the video wills of “martyrs” and stylised productions eulogising the 9/11 hijackers.



“Possession of this material is strong evidence of the depth of their adherence to the cause,” Mark Ellison, for the prosecution, told the court.



“Collecting it, providing links for others to obtain it, applauding it, defending it — as we say these defendants did — as well as making it available to a wide audience on websites is strong evidence of the approval of it and of the ideology it seeks to justify.”

how come non-muslim sources who collect and distribute the same material dont get arrested?

here is a non-muslim source that provides links for others to obtain it, defends it by protecting the content and thinks jihad videos are cool, in other words they applaud it and give their approval by rating the 'action'
http://iraq.liveleak.com/

Umm
26th April 2007, 08:56 PM
Exactly. It wasn't Muslim sites who gave us all the splendid opportunity to see the Russian soldier getting decapitated.

Niqaabis
26th April 2007, 09:23 PM
how come non-muslim sources who collect and distribute the same material dont get arrested?

here is a non-muslim source that provides links for others to obtain it, defends it by protecting the content and thinks jihad videos are cool, in other words they applaud it and give their approval by rating the 'action'
http://iraq.liveleak.com/

subhaan Allaah

I just clicked that site.......they have a video titled


The perfect wedding day in Iraq
Get married then fire a 107mm rocket at the Occupiers

does that really happen?

I know in pakhtun weddings one tradition they have is to fire gun shots in the air as a form of celebration for the happy occasion

Is it the same in the video?

gag order
26th April 2007, 09:48 PM
since you drew my attention to it, i went back to watch it. and it gave me an idea for my second wedding party!

the nakshabandi army must be one that broke away from pacifist sufi sects that defected to the mujahideen which i read about in the western press not too long ago.