Plotters of deadly Afghan attacks arrested: official

(Reuters) – Afghanistan’s intelligence department has detained four Taliban insurgents behind a series of deadly attacks against foreign targets in the capital, a spokesman for the agency said on Saturday.

The National Department for Security (NDS) also arrested another Taliban group which planned to stage attacks in Kabul in coming days, Saeed Ansari told reporters.

The first group was involved in five suicide attacks against foreigners in the city, including on the Indian embassy last year and another in February on a guest house used by Indian nationals. Scores of people, many of them Afghans, were killed.

The attacks were planned from Pakistan, where the Taliban have sanctuary, Ansari said.

“This group either managed to flee or went into hiding, but the vigilant officials of the NDS, with the help of people, managed to arrest them,” he said.

The second group consisted of six insurgents who carried out attacks against Afghan and foreign forces on a highway south of Kabul and planned further raids, including suicide bombings. Two of those held were clerics at local mosques in Kabul province.

NDS officials also seized around 450 kgs (1,000 pounds) of explosive materials during a raid against the group which was living in house on the outskirts of Kabul.

Removed from power in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, despite the presence of nearly 150,000 foreign troops.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox)

Plotters of deadly Afghan attacks arrested – official

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Afghanistan’s intelligence department has detained four Taliban insurgents behind a series of deadly attacks against foreign targets in the capital, a spokesman for the agency said on Saturday.

The National Department for Security (NDS) also arrested another Taliban group which planned to stage attacks in Kabul in coming days, Saeed Ansari told reporters.

The first group was involved in five suicide attacks against foreigners in the city, including on the Indian embassy last year and another in February on a guest house used by Indian nationals. Scores of people, many of them Afghans, were killed.

The attacks were planned from Pakistan, where the Taliban have sanctuary, Ansari said.

“This group either managed to flee or went into hiding, but the vigilant officials of the NDS, with the help of people, managed to arrest them,” he said.

The second group consisted of six insurgents who carried out attacks against Afghan and foreign forces on a highway south of Kabul and planned further raids, including suicide bombings. Two of those held were clerics at local mosques in Kabul province.

NDS officials also seized around 450 kgs (1,000 pounds) of explosive materials during a raid against the group which was living in house on the outskirts of Kabul.

Removed from power in a U.S.-led invasion in 2001, the Taliban have made a comeback in recent years, despite the presence of nearly 150,000 foreign troops.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here) (sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Two persons killed in Russian car bomb blast

Moscow, Apr 1(ANI): Two people were reportedly killed in a car bomb blast in Russia’s Caucasus region on Thursday.

According to reports, a explosives-laden car blew up near the region of Khasavyurt.

“According to preliminary information, the explosive materials that were in the car went off accidentally,” The Interfax news agency quoted a security source, as saying.

Thursday’s blast follows the twin blasts in the Caucasus region of Dagestan occurred on Wednesday and the double explosions in the Moscow Metro on Monday.

Wednesday’s double suicide bombing killed at least 12 people and wounded 23 others, mostly members of Russia’s security forces.

The first blast occurred when an explosives-laden vehicle did not stop at a police check post, and exploded when a police car chased and came close to it.

The area was cordoned off, and at that point, a suicide bomber in a police uniform had blown himself up.

Earlier, on Monday, two explosions had rocked two central Moscow metro stations, which were the deadliest terror attacks inside Russia in six years, killing at least 41 people.

The first explosion ripped through a train that had stopped in the Lubyanka station just below the headquarters of FSB at 8a.m. local time, and the second occurred 40 minutes later in a carriage of a train on the platform at the Park Kultury metro station.

Chechen separatist leader Doku Umarov aka Dokka Abu Usman has claimed responsibility for Monday’s Moscow metro bombings. (ANI)

Christian militia planned to ‘wage war’ on government

Nine members of a Christian militia have been charged with plotting to kill police and trying to wage war on the United States government.

After FBI raids in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, nine members of the militia called Hutaree have been charged with seditious conspiracy, attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and teaching the use of explosive materials.

Prosecutors allege they were just days away from planning to kill a policeman and then launching an attack at his funeral with homemade bombs.

Court documents said the group would then retreat to one of several “rally points” to “wage war against the government and be prepared to defend in depth with trip-wired and command-detonated anti-personnel improvised explosive devices, ambushes and prepared fighting positions”.

Prosecutors said Hutaree considered police officers to be “foot soldiers” of the US government and counted among their enemies anyone who did not share their beliefs or was participating in the “new world order”.

The Hutaree website says it is “preparing for the end time battles to keep the testimony of Jesus Christ alive”.

They had allegedly been in training since at least 2008.

An FBI spokesman says the bureau takes extremist groups seriously.

The accused face a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted.

- ABC/AFP

3000 kgs of explosives, machine guns recovered in Lahore

Lahore, Mar.17 (ANI): Over 3000 kilograms of explosive materials and four advance machine guns were recovered by the Lahore Police from a shop in the Allama Iqbal Town.

The owner of the shop, Javed Sheikh, has also been arrested and is being interrogated.

The recovery of arms and ammunition comes just a day after 1500 kilograms of explosive materials and several suicide vests was found in a raid the same area of the city.

The 3,000 kilogrammes of ammonium nitrate and potassium, which were packed in 200 small sacks, is the biggest quantity of explosive material ever to be seized in Lahore, The Daily Times reports.

Confirming the recovery of huge cache of arms and ammunition, Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) (Operations) Shafiq Ahmed said the explosives were stocked for triggering some ‘major terrorist attack’ in the city, which has witnessed two deadly attacks in the past fortnight.

Ahmed said a combination of the two chemicals seized could be lethal and destroy everything in a radius of 500 metres.

Bomb disposal squad officials said ammonium nitrate, which is used as a fertilizer for crops, were packed in sacks which bore the mark of ‘Pak-Arab Fertilizer’.

Meanwhile, the recovery of huge explosives and arms has panicked Lahore citizens, who fear that a massive terror strike is looming large over the city and other parts of the province.

However, it is also believed that the extremists had deliberately stocked the explosives in the shop to show their ‘strength’. (ANI)

Jharkhand police seized 450 bags of explosives

Hazaribagh (Jharkhand), Aug 18 (ANI): Jharkhand police arrested three persons and seized a consignment of 450 bags of ammonium nitrate and 10 detonators here.

Acting on a tip off, the police raided a truck laden with bags of ammonium nitrate in Ichak block of Hazaribagh district and nabbed the three persons escorting the explosive materials.

“We were constantly getting information that ammonium nitrate is brought in the jurisdiction of Ichak Police Station and is immediately distributed. In the past as well we came to know during interrogation with three to four rebels that they had taken ammonium nitrate from Ichak for making landmines,” said Pankaj Khamboj, Superintendent of Police, Hazaribagh.

Police said that seized ammonium nitrate was to be supplied to Maoists who in turn would have used it to make landmines and other explosives.

Ammonium nitrate chemical is a common ingredient in making bombs, mines and allied detonators. Though used as a fertiliser, ammonium nitrate can also be mixed with other materials to make a powerful explosive. (ANI)

Pak-origin terror suspects used wedding code words for al-Qaeda bombing plot: MI5

London, Aug. 15 (ANI): British intelligence service MI5 has arrested a group of Pakistan-origin terror suspects who were using code words about a wedding in their emails for an al-Qaeda bomb plot, it has emerged.

One e-mail referred to a girl called Nadia who would be involved in a nikah, or wedding, between April 15 and 20 this year.

MI5 officers who were intercepting their emails concluded that the girls’ names were code for explosive ingredients and the wedding was the date of a planned attack, The Times reports.

Details of the claims were revealed as part of a hearing last month of five Pakistani men seeking bail from the Special Immigration Appeals Commission.

None of the men, among 12 seized by police in raids across the North West of England in April, has been charged with any criminal offences.

They are challenging government attempts to deport them on the ground that they threaten national security.

Giving the reasons for the decision to refuse bail for the first time yesterday, Justice Mitting said a series of e-mails exchanged between an address attributed to one of the men and another attributed to an al-Qaeda associate were “central to the open case against the appellants.”

The e-mails from the man, identified only as XC, were written to “Sohaib.” In a written statement, Justice Mitting said: “The assessment of the security service is that references to named girls could be to ingredients from which an explosive device could be made and that the reference to the nikah is ‘most likely’ reference to an intended attack.”

Justice Mitting said the final interpretation of the e-mails would have to wait until a full hearing takes place next year.

He said that the “undisputed fact” that no explosive materials have been recovered was “at least a significant gap” in the Government’s case against the men.

Lawyers for the men have sought assurances that they will not be arrested and detained indefinitely if they are forced to go back to Pakistan. (ANI)

Three Indonesian militants jailed for 12 years

akarta – An Indonesian court on Tuesday sentenced three Islamic militants to 12 years each for plotting terrorist attacks and killing a Christian teacher.

The three men – Sugianto, Adityawarman and Heri Purwanto – were among 10 people arrested in the South Sumatran provincial capital Palembang last year for alleged involvement in a plot to bomb a cafe and to kill Christian priests as part of a jihad campaign waged by the Jemaah Islamiyah regional militant group.

Judges at the South Jakarta district court found the three guilty of involvement in the murder of a Christian teacher in Palembang in 2007 and a conspiracy to blow up a cafe in neighboring West Sumatra the previous year.

Prosecutors said the militants aborted the plan after realizing that the cafe was frequented by women wearing Muslim headscarves.

Prosecutors have sought 20 years in prison for a Singaporean Muslim militant, Muhammad Hasan bin Zaynudin, suspected to be the leader of the South Sumatra cell.

Hasan has admitted he had met al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and undergone military training in Afghanistan.

During the raids on the militants in June and July, police seized 20 assembled bombs, dozens of kilograms of potassium chlorate and other explosive materials as well as several hand grenades.

The country’s anti-terrorism police have arrested about 300 militants since the 2002 Bali bombings, which killed 202 people, but authorities said the threat of more attacks remained even though the country has not suffered an attack since 2005.(dpa)

Prosecutors seek prison terms for five suspected terrorists

Jakarta – Government prosecutors on Tuesday demanded prison term ranging from seven years to 15 years for five suspected Islamic militants on trial for allegedly plotting to bomb a cafe and kill a Christian priest.

Prosecutors told the South Jakarta court that the defendants were guilty of violating the country’s tough anti-terrorism laws, enacted just weeks after the October 2002 bombings of two nightspots on the resort island of Bali that killed at least 202 people.

Prosecutors sought 15 years in prison each for two of the five – Abdurrahman Thaib and M Agus Toni – and sought sentences of up to eight years for the other defendants.

The trial of a Singaporean Muslim militant, Muhammad Hasan bin Zaynudin, was still underway. Prosecutors were also seeking a prison sentence for Hasan, who claimed to have met al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and undergone basic military training in Afghanistan.

Prosecutors accused the defendants of plotting to attack a cafe in the West Sumatra town of Bukittinggi and kill a Christian priest in West Java in 2005.

The defendants are among 10 suspected members of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) militant network arrested in June and July last year during raids on several locations in Palembang, the capital of South Sumatra province.

Police seized 20 assembled bombs, dozens of kilograms of potassium chlorate and other explosive materials as well as several hand grenades during the raids.

Police said they believed Muhammad was a close aide to Malaysian bomb-maker Azahari bin Husin, who was killed in a shootout with police at his East Java provinces hideout in late 2005.

Counter-terrorism police are still hunting for Malaysian bomb-maker Noordin Mohammad Top, who allegedly leads a breakaway faction of JI and is believed to be a key player behind most major bombings in Indonesia.

The country’s anti-terror police have arrested some 300 militants in recent years, but authorities say the threat of more attacks remains, even though the country has not suffered a bombing since 2005. (dpa)