I warn people from going to Tibyan site, unless you want to be arrested see these documents:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aabid_Khan
http://www.nefafoundation.org/miscel...idkhan0908.pdf
The BBC's security correspondent, Gordon Corera claimed that At-Tibyan, one of the websites set up and maintained by Younes Tsouli, had been linked with three British trials where convictions were secured.
Yassin Nassari was a regular user of the At-Tibyan website, which had a forum. 28-year old Nassari and his Dutch-born wife arrived at Luton airport in Bedfordshire on an Easyjet flight from Amsterdam on May 13, 2006. On May 30, 2007, a jury at the Old Bailey heard that Nassari's wife Bouchra El Hor had written him a letter, which was found in their luggage. This seemed to be a "farewell" letter prior to her husband's imminent "martyrdom", though she successfully argued that it referred to marital difficulties.Nassari was sentenced to three and a half years' jail on 18 July, 2007. He smiled when sentenced. His wife Bouchra el Hor was acquitted of "failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism." On the At-Tibyan website, Nassari had called himself "Mock Turtle". Here he shared jihadist videos with Tsouli's accomplice, Tariq al-Daour.
The At-Tibyan web forum was also used as a vehicle of communication by a group of students from Bradford University. On July 27, 2007 four students - Akbar Butt, aged 20 from Southall in London, Awaab Iqbal, aged 20 from Rochdale, Usman Malik, aged 21 from Wolverhampton, and Altzaz Zafar, aged 20 from Rochdale, Lancashire were jailed from 27 months to three years. They were found guilty of possessing material useful for terrorism under the Terrorism Act 2000. This related to material on their computers, including a US military manual which detailed how to make explosives, and a suicide bombing manual.
On an internet chat room (apparently At-Tibyan) Usman Malik had conversations with a cousin in Syria who was later arrested as a suspected terrorist. The cousin advised him to have a cover story when going to Pakistan for terror training. The group had a British contact on the chat room called Imran, who lived in Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province. He had invited them to come to his home, and to invent cover stories.
http://www.westernresistance.com/blo...es/003950.htmlAnother convicted individual who had links with Younes Tsouli's At-Tibyan website was Mohammed Atif Siddique. He lived at his parents' home in Alva, Clackmannanshire, in Scotland. He had been arrested on April 13, 2006 after several weeks of surveillance. He had tried to board a flight to Pakistan on April 5, 2006 with a laptop containing Al Qaeda propaganda.
Siddique studied computing at Glasgow College of Nautical Studies. A fortnight after his arrest, he was released without charge. On October 23, 2006 he was charged on five counts under the Terrorism Acts of 2000 and 2006.
On September 17, 2007 Siddique was found guilty on three terrorism charges at Glasgow High Court. Evan Kohlmann, who had assisted the prosecution in the trial of Younes Tsouli and his associates Waseem Mughal and Tariq al-Daour, gave evidence at Siddique's trial. Siddique had used the internet to distribute terrorist material

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