027. UK Terror
Investigations - News Roundup - July 5
July 5, 2007
http://counterterrorismblog.org/2007/07/uk_terror_july_5.phpUK
Terror Investigations - News Roundup - July 5
By Jeffrey Imm
July 5 news roundup of UK terror plot investigation
activities and related news:
-- 45 Muslim doctors planned US terror raids. Daily
Telegraph reports that
"45 Muslim doctors threatened to use car bombs and rocket grenades in
terrorist attacks in the United States during discussions on an
extremist internet chat site". Police found details of discussion on
the British Jihadist web site run by Younis Tsouli ("Terrorist 007").
Jihadists stated
"We are 45 doctors and we are determined to undertake jihad and take the
battle inside America.The first target which will be penetrated by nine
brothers is the naval base which gives shelter to the ship Kennedy."
Telegraph believes that is refers to the USS John F Kennedy, which is
often at Mayport Naval Base in Jacksonville, Florida. Daily Telegraph
states that the Jihadists also referred to using six Chevrolet GT
vehicles and three fishing boats and blowing up petrol tanks with rocket
propelled grenades. This would support Sky News report on July 4 of
British Anglican cleric Canon Andrew White who has said of an April
discussion with Al-Qaeda representative where
"[h]e told me that they were going to start killing in the UK then the
USA".
-- UK Court Gives 24 Years in Prison to 3 British Internet
Jihadists. Per Reuters, police said that
three
Islamist cyber-terrorists were sentenced to a total of 24 years in
prison: Younes Tsouli (10 years), Waseem Mughal (7 1/2 years), and Tariq
al-Daour (6 1/2 years). "Tsouli, the suspected ringleader, used the
online identity 'irhabi007' -- the Arabic word for terrorist, followed
by the code number of the fictional British spy James Bond. He was
responsible for setting up an Internet chat room forum used by al Qaeda
supporters from which explosives and weapons manuals could be
downloaded." The Washington Post reports a related link in
"Terrorism's Hook Into Your Inbox", where it shows
a link between online fraud and jihadist networks, specifically how eBay
Internet fraud was sold on the Internet black market by British Jihadist
Tariq al-Daour (convicted for 6 1/2 years in this case). UK
television has a
video report on such cyber-terrorism.
-- Jihad tapes targeted UK professionals for more than a
decade. BBC reports today that
"Videos have
tried to attract doctors, lawyers and scientists into Islamic extremism
for more than a decade". BBC indicates that these videos include a 1999
film with "a man claiming to be a third-year medical student in
Birmingham", and that such Jihadist recruitment videos included
appearances by Al-Qaeda's Dr. Ayman Al Zawahiri.
-- Asylum-seeker convicted for terror training materials and
money-laundering. AP reports that Omar Altimimi was convicted
"Thursday of possessing terrorist training manuals, including
instructions on using gas canisters to make car bombs". Guardian
states that
"[f]iles on Altimimi's computer contained detailed information on how to
set up terror cells in the UK, ways to make explosives, and instructions
on how car bombs could be detonated at the entrances to buildings via
remote control." Prosecutors believe that Altimimi was linked to the
Dhiren Barot British Jihadist group through connections
with convicted terrorist Junade Ferouze. Reuters also reports that
Manchester police called
Altimimi a sleeper agent, and was likely planning to attack nightclubs
and airports.
-- Mohammed Asha - Ringleader 'Al-Qaeda sleeper'.
Courier Mail reported that suspected terrorist ringleader Dr. Mohammed
Asha
"was a "sleeper" sent to Britain to await orders from Al-Qaeda",
according to British security sources. "There are genuine concerns that
the cell which was broken up in the past few days was not a one-off and
that there are others out there plotting mass murder," a British
security source said yesterday."The worrying truth is, we don't know how
many are out there."
-- Profiles of individual terror suspects: Daily
Mail provides individual profiles on:
Dr. Mohammed Haneef,
Dr. Mohammed Asha, and
Dr. Bilal Abdulla.
-- Ties between terrorists. Daily Telegraph reports
that 3 of the terrorists
"are members of the same family from the Indian city of Bangalore, while
the families of another two were old friends in the Middle East. Several
shared homes in Britain. All but one were doctors working in NHS
hospitals. What unites them all is their chosen profession, medicine."
Telegraph also provides an
illustrative chart. London Times reports that
two of the terrorists are cousins.
-- Airport attack doctor was known extremist. Daily
Telegraph reports that Glasgow bomber Dr. Bilal Abdulla
"had been recognised as a seriously "radicalised" student four years
ago... with possible links to the al-Qa'eda-led insurgency".
-- UK Islamist Group Hizb-ut-Tahrir Tried To Recruit Glasgow
Bomber. BBC television show
"Politics of
Terror" revealed that Cambridge cell of Islamist group Hizb-ut-Tahrir
tried to recruit Glasgow bomber Dr. Bilal Abdulla. Hizb-ut-Tahrir is
a legal organization in the UK, and
its members have included an employee of the UK Home Office. See
Zeyno Baran's
Oct. 30, 2005 IHT op-ed on Hizbut.
-- UK Parliament Debate over Hizb-ut-Tahrir and other UK
Islamist groups.
Sky News shows video where UK Parliament members challenged UK PM Gordon
Brown over the government's failure to ban Hizb-ut-Tahrir and Islamist
groups in UK that advocate violence. UK PM Gordon Brown argues that
there is insufficient evidence to do so, despite Parliament opposition
referencing specific Hizb-ut-Tahrir literature advocating violence. On
December 24, 2006, UK
PM Tony Blair shelved plans to ban Hizb-ut-Tahrir.
-- Plan to consult Muslim leaders on raids shelved.
Guardian reports:
"Police have scrapped a plan to allow Muslim community leaders to
examine intelligence ahead of terror raids".
-- Scottish House Used as Makeshift Bomb Factory. AP
is reporting that a
"Scottish
house had been used as a makeshift bomb factory to carry out the terror
attacks in London and Scotland" a few miles from Glasgow airport, and
that Jihadists"slept upstairs and used the downstairs as a makeshift
bomb factory".
-- London Bomb Failed Due to Mechanism. ABC reports
that
"London bomb plot allegedly planned by a cell of doctors failed early
last Friday morning because a medical syringe used as part of the firing
mechanism caused a malfunction."
-- Prophet cartoons protester convicted in London of
incitement to murder. AP reports that on conviction of London's
Mizanur Rahman, a
"speaker at a rally protesting against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
was convicted Thursday of inciting murder." Prosecutors showed video of
Rahman calling for the death of British soldiers and carrying "placards
calling for the beheading and annihilation of anyone who insulted Islam".
-- Britain Lowers Terrorism Threat Level to Severe.
ABC News reported that
"Britain reduced its terrorism threat level to 'severe,' meaning further
attacks are still considered likely but not imminent, as was feared when
authorities raised the level to 'critical' after the failed attacks.
Still, Britain's home secretary asked the public to remain vigilant,
saying there was still a 'serious and real threat against the United
Kingdom.'"
-- House of Lords To Hear Terrorism Law Appeals. Sky
News reports that the UK House of Lords will hear an appeal on control
orders regarding British Jihadist suspects. UK Court of Appeal ruled
last year that such control orders
"were incompatible with Article 5 of the European Convention On Human
Rights, which prevents indefinite detention without trial." Sky News
reports that
"[t]en terror suspects [have been] placed under controversial control
orders - including at least two who are on the run".
-- Daily Express Reports UK PM and EU Disallows Link Between
Terror and Islam. Daily Express has reported that
UK PM
Gordon Brown "has banned ministers from using the word 'Muslim' in
connection with the terrorism crisis. The Prime Minister has also
instructed his team – including new Home Secretary Jacqui Smith – that
the phrase 'war on terror' is to be dropped." In addition, the
Daily Express reports that
"Secret EU
guidelines have been drawn up warning governments not to link Islam and
terrorism."
Sources:
Daily Telegraph: 45 Muslim doctors planned US terror raids
Sky News: Full Text Of Vicar's Terror Warning Email
Reuters: UK court jails trio who incited terrorism over Web
UK Television
Video Report on Cyber-terrorists
Washington Post: Terrorism's Hook Into Your Inbox - U.K. Case Shows Link
Between Online Fraud and Jihadist Networks
BBC: Jihad
tapes targeted professions
AP: British court convicts man of having terrorist manuals, and money
laundering
Guardian: Man convicted of keeping terror manuals
Reuters: Britain
convicts al-Qaida "sleeper" agent Omar Altimimi
AP: British court cases highlight Al-Qaeda threat
Courier-Mail: Ringleader 'Al-Qaeda sleeper'
Daily Mail: Terror suspects: Mohammed Haneef - Doctor who was trapped at
airport
Daily Mail: Terror suspects: Mohammed Asha - Surgeon 'who turned
radical'
Daily Mail: Terror suspects: Bilal Abdulla - Wanted revenge for his
friend killed in Iraq
Daily Telegraph: Ties that bind terror car bomb suspectsIllustrative
Chart
London Times: Indian doctors held in terror raids are cousins
Daily Telegraph: Airport attack doctor was known extremist
BBC Video
"Politics of Terror" focuses on Hizb ut Tahrir and their infiltration
into British schools and institutions
Sky News: Prime Minister Gordon Brown addresses demands of Parliament
members to ban Hizb ut-Tahrir
Evening Standard: Home Office staff can join Islamic extremists
BBC Video (30 minute) regarding Parliament debate on Islamist groups
Guardian: Plan to consult Muslim leaders on raids shelved
AP:
British Media: Scottish House Used as Makeshift Bomb Factory
ABC
News: UK Terror Plot -- Why the Bombs Failed - ABC News: Medical syringe
used in firing mechanism caused malfunction
AP: Prophet cartoons protester convicted in London of incitement to
murder
ABC News: Britain Lowers Terrorism Threat Level
Sky News: House of Lords To Hear Terrorism Law Appeals
Daily
Express: Brown: Don't say terrorists are Muslims
Daily Express:
Europe tells Britain: Don't Says "Muslim" in Connection With Terrorism
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