“Missing” Guantanamo returnee back at home: family

(Reuters) – An Algerian repatriated from the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay was resting at home on Monday, his family said, ending a week-long search for him that prompted rights groups to say he could be suffering abuse.

Uncertainty over the whereabouts of Abdul Aziz Naji had fueled allegations from rights campaigners that U.S. President Barack Obama’s push to close Guantanamo Bay was leaving former detainees at risk of mistreatment once they were sent home.

Naji, who had been held at Guantanamo since 2002, had told his lawyers he did not want to return to Algeria under any circumstances because he feared persecution from the Algerian government and Islamist militants there.

“He is back home, tired, but he is free,” his brother Hamza told Reuters by telephone from the town of Batna, 500 km (300 miles) east of the Algerian capital.

“He did not say that he had been abused during his detention,” he said.

Earlier, Algerian justice officials said a judge on Sunday had ordered Naji’s release after a period of detention — which they said was completely lawful — following his July 18 return from Guantanamo Bay to Algeria.

“Contrary to what has been falsely reported, this person’s case has been dealt with in the most complete transparency and in respect for the law, whether in terms of procedure or the length of his detention,” the Algiers prosecutor’s office said in a statement.

COURT APPEARANCE

The statement said Naji had been held in detention in Algeria in accordance with legislation allowing terrorism suspects to be held for up to 12 days before appearing in court.

It said he was freed after appearing before a judge on Sunday who put him under judicial control — which means he has to report regularly to police pending a decision on his case.

“He is at home in Batna,” said a judicial source who did not want to be identified. “He just needs to go every week to the local police station to sign a form.”

Obama has made a pledge to close down Guantanamo Bay, which has been condemned by civil liberties advocates since it was opened by the Bush administration in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities.

But resettling inmates from the U.S. base on Cuba has proved difficult, and any evidence that former detainees are mistreated after being sent home could make it harder for Obama to meet his commitment.

U.S. rights groups said last week they were worried because Naji’s lawyers and family had been unable to locate him since his return. They said they believed he could be in secret detention in Algeria.

Algerian officials deny abusing prisoners. Rights groups say that before Naji’s return, 10 Algerians had been repatriated from Guantanamo Bay. Western diplomats say none of them has been mistreated since they came back.

(Writing by Christian Lowe; editing by Andrew Roche)

UK taxpayer to fork out 800,000 pounds as legal fees for hate cleric Hamza

London, May 18 (ANI): The UK taxpayer is all set to fork out 800,000 pounds as legal fees for jailed hate preacher Abu Hamza.

Two years ago, hook-handed Hamza was ordered pay a million pounds as defence costs, but he has paid nothing so far.

“If nothing else is found, it means the taxpayer will have to pay 800,000 pounds for the shortfall,” The Sun quoted a Whitehall source, as saying.

The trial judge said a house linked to Hamza, who pleads poverty, should be sold as a contribution.

Legal officials face trouble in seizing the house, as Hamza, 51, claims it belongs to his sister, who lives in Egypt.

Even if the 1930s property in Greenford, West London, is grabbed it will probably fetch only 200,000 pounds instead of the original 235,000-pound value.

A Legal Services Commission spokesman said: “We will go to court to apply for the seizure of the property. We are waiting for a date.”

Hamza, jailed for seven years in 2006 for soliciting murder, is in London’s Belmarsh Prison and is fighting extradition to the US.

“This is Abu Hamza continuing to thumb his nose,” Tory MP Patrick Mercer said. (ANI)

Inquiry to be held into UK’s anti-terror raids

London, Apr 23 (ANI): An independent inquiry is likely to be held into the anti-terrorist operation that led to the resignation of a senior British policeman, armed raids, arrest and release of 11 Pakistani citizens without any charges being levied on them.

Lord Carlile of Berriew, the reviewer of terrorism legislation, said that he would carry out “a snapshot review” of the detention of 12 men picked up a fortnight ago in Manchester, Liverpool and Lancashire, amid claims of an Easter bomb plot.

The release of the final two suspects on Wednesday means that all 12 have been freed without charge. However, 11 of them, Pakistani citizens in Britain on student visas, face deportation on national security grounds, a process that is likely to spark lengthy legal challenges, The Times reported.

Lord Carlile said that he had personally decided to review Operation Pathway, details of which were accidentally disclosed to Downing Street photographers by Assistant Commissioner Bob Quick of Scotland Yard, forcing the arrests to be brought forward. Quick resigned, admitting that he had compromised the operation.

“I shall be requesting input into these events from all involved as soon as possible. This will include those arrested and their legal representatives,” he said.

The only British citizen among those freed was named locally as Hamza Shenwari, 41, a delivery driver, from Cheetham Hill, Manchester.

Neighbours said that Shenwari was staying at a hotel while police restored his home to the state it was in before extensive searches.

The failure of the operation raises questions about the level of co-operation between different anti-terror agencies.

MI5, Scotland Yard and Greater Manchester are said to have had angry disagreements about the timing of the arrests. (ANI)

Pakistan arrests sixth suspect in Mumbai attacks

Lahore, April 20 (IANS) Pakistan has arrested a sixth suspect in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks and is conducting a ‘sincere investigation’ into the carnage, the country’s interior minister says.

Speaking to reporters at the wedding ceremony here Sunday night of a ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader here, minister Rehman Malik however refused to provide details of the fresh arrest.

At the same time, he said India had not provided all the details to the queries Pakistan had posed on the dossier New Delhi had provided pointing to the involvement of elements from this country in the Nov 26-29, 2008 Mumbai attacks that claimed the lives of over 170 people, including 26 foreigners.

Underlining the need for India’s cooperation in connection with the Mumbai probe, he said: ‘The accused cannot be awarded punishment in the absence of concrete evidence.’

He also asked for a certified copy of the confession made by Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone gunman captured during the carnage and whose trial has begun in a heavily-guarded Mumbai court.

Pakistan has previously confirmed the arrest of five men for their alleged involvement in the Mumbai attacks.

They are Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, its communications specialist Zarar Shah, Hamad Ameen Sadiq, Hamza alias Abu Alqa and Shahid Jamil Riaz.

Last week, Riaz had ‘confessed’ his role in the Mumbai carnage, saying he and four other arrested men had provided transportation facilities, accommodation, Internet and other facilities to the terrorists who had attacked India’s financial capital.

Pakistani ‘confesses’ to role in Mumbai attacks

Islamabad, April 16 (IANS) A Pakistani claiming to be a Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operative has ‘confessed’ to his role in the 26/11 Mumbai carnage, saying four other leaders of the terror group were also involved.

Quoting sources in the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA), The News said that Shahid Jamil Riaz who belongs to the LeT had confessed that he and four others had provided transportation facilities, accommodation, Internet and other facilities to the terrorists who had attacked Mumbai.

The four men Riaz has named are LeT commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, its communications specialist Zarar Shah, Hamad Ameen Sadiq and Hamza alias Abu Alqa.

All for are in custody but have not been formally charged with involvement in the Nov 26-29, 2008 Mumbai terror attacks that claimed the lives of over 170 people, including 26 foreigners.

They had been picked up in a crackdown by Pakistani security forces in December 2008 after the UN, acting on US and Indian pressure, proscribed the Jamaat-ud Daawa that the LeT had morphed into after being banned in the wake of the Dec 13, 2001 attack on the Indian parliament that New Delhi blamed on the terror group.

Riaz, who was arrested from Europe last month, is not among the eight men the FIA has charged with their alleged involvement in the Mumbai attacks.

Of the eight, six are in custody and the seventh is at large. The eight is Ajmal Amir Kasab, the lone terrorist captured alive during the Mumbai carnage and whose trial has now begun.

Riaz recorded his confession before special judicial magistrate Ahmed Masood Janjua, who sent him to Adiala Jail in the adjacent garrison town of Rawalpindi on 14-day judicial remand.

He was brought to court amidst tight security, with two officials of the Special Investigation Cell (SIC) accompanying him to the magistrate’s chamber, from which the media was banned, for recording his statement.

A junior officer of the interior ministry, meanwhile, rejected Riaz’s confession, saying he had made a statement in court but this could not be termed a confession.

Arrested Pakistani students nowhere near a college’

London, April 12 (IANS) Most of the Pakistanis recently arrested in Britain on suspicion of involvement in an Easter terrorist plot had not reported at any college despite coming to this country on student visas, a newspaper reported Sunday.

‘Most of them hadn’t been near a college, yet somehow they got visas,’ the Sun quoted a senior police source as saying.

Eleven Pakistanis, 10 of them on student visas, were arrested Wednesday in raids on residential addresses in northwest England in connection with a bomb plot.

One of the Pakistanis, an 18 year old, has been handed over to the UK Border Agency, which handles immigration. The twelfth is reported to be a Briton.

Police were Saturday given a further week to question the 11 suspects as searches continued at 10 premises in the cities of Manchester and Liverpool.

The Sun said detectives fear an Al Qaeda cell has gathered enough materials to cause devastation in Manchester, but have been unable to locate key components despite hunts in Liverpool, Manchester and Clitheroe in Lancashire.

It named the alleged ringleader as Abid Naseer, 22, and other members of the plot as Hamza Shenwari, Sultan Sher and Abdul Wahab Khan.

Two security guards seized in Clitheroe were named locally as Johnus Khan and Umar Farooq.

It said photographs found at an address indicated targets for an alleged bomb attack included the Arndale and Trafford shopping centres, the Birdcage nightclub and St Ann’s Square in Manchester.

Two suspects arrested in Pakistan Saturday are suspected of using coded emails to pass orders from Al Qaeda chiefs to plotters in the Manchester area, the Sun said.

Meanwhile, the arrests have led to a row over the standard of immigration checks in Britain.

Immigration Minister Phil Woolas Friday insisted Britain’s security processes were world-class, but the opposition Conservative Party’s Shadow Home Secretary Chris Grayling said: ‘We desperately need proper policing of our borders but despite all the promises from this government, it simply is not happening.’

Pakistan’s High Commissioner to Britain Wajid Shamsul Hasan has said British officers in Islamabad carried out insufficient checks on foreign students.

Hasan said Pakistani authorities could help with checks on applicants but were not allowed to.

Pictures of Manchester terror plot suspect out for the first time

London, Apr. 13 (ANI): A picture of Manchester terror plot suspect and university student Janas Khan has been released in the public domain for the first time.

Khan, 25, was studying at Hope University in Liverpool and was also illegally moonlighting as a six-pound-an hour security guard, the Daily Telegraph reports.

Peshawar based Khan obtained his passport in September 2006, and is thought to have arranged his student visa and travel to Britain shortly afterwards.

Haroon Khan who employed the arrested man, said: “He is very slight, not a big guy at all. We have a gym here but he never used it. He was a very clever lad but a bit of a loner, always looking for attention or company.”

Khan resigned from his job but signed on with a store as a security guard, which is close to a chemical plant run by Johnson Matthey and it is suspected the men may have been using their jobs as security guards to scout potential targets.

MI5 arrested the men, and police suspect the men were sent to Britain as suicide bombers by al-Qaeda planners in Pakistan’s tribal areas, not far from Peshawar.

Police have been given another week to question 11 men aged between 22 and 41, all but one of who are Pakistani citizens and most of whom arrived using student visas.

An 18-year-old was released without charge but immediately detained by immigration authorities.

Among the others arrested are Abid Naseer, 22, and Hamza Shinwari, another security guard, who both lived in Cheetham Hill, Manchester.

The main tenant where three men were arrested in Cedar Grove, Toxteth in Liverpool was Abdul Wahab Khan, 26, a student.

Searches are continuing at 10 addresses across the northwestern England. (ANI)

Hate preacher Abu Hamza’s sons involved in luxury car scam

London, Apr 9 (ANI): Radical Islamist preacher Abu Hamza’s three sons face prison over a one million pound luxury car racket.

Hamza’s sons Hamza Kamel, 22, and Mohamed Mostafa, 27, ran the fraud with stepson Mohssin Ghailam, 28, and three others.

The trio masterminded a scam in which expensive makes such as Mercedes, BMWs and Range Rovers were targeted.

They spotted motors left in long-stay car parks and sent off their registrations to the DVLA, claiming to be owners who had moved house, The Sun reported.

Armed with new logbooks they got duplicate keys from dealers, London’s Southwark Crown Court was told. Then they stole the cars.

Kamel and Mostafa, of Acton, West London, between them admitted handling stolen goods, laundering cash and fraud. Ghailam, of Shepherd’s Bush, admitted fraud. The case was adjourned for reports.

Mostafa has previously been in jail in Yemen over a plot to bomb tourists. A source said: “There is no evidence cash was spent on terrorism. They just used it to party.”

Hamza, 50, who preached race hate at a London mosque, is serving seven years for soliciting murder. (ANI)

JuD chief Hafiz Saeed challenges his detention in Lahore High Court

Lahore, Apr. 5 (ANI): Challenging their detention, Jamat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed and his three associates have filed a petition in the Lahore High Court.

Saeed, Colonel (r) Nazeer Ahmad, Abdul Rehman and Ameer Hamza filed the petition under Article 199(1bi) of the constitution, the Daily Times reports.

The leaders of the banned organization have asked the court to determine if they were being held in custody in accordance with the law, their counsel AK Dogar said.

Dogar claimed that the detention of his clients, which was ordered by the Home Department on January 9 and again on March 9, was without lawful authority and of no legal effect.

In the petition, Dogar submitted that Hafiz Saeed had been earlier arrested during the Musharraf regime, but was released by the orders of the LHC.

There was no on the record allegation against the petitioner or his organization, he added.

Furthermore, the counsel noted that the LHC had also observed that Dawa had never been involved in any terrorist activities in Pakistan, and no FIR had ever been registered against Dawa or any of its detained members.

“Dawa was an independent organization with no links with Lashkar-e-Tayyaba,” he stated.

Dogar requested the court to issue a habeas corpus direction, which would require the respondents to present the petitioners before the LHC. (ANI)

Yemen launches trial of 16 al-Qaeda suspects for tourist killings

Sana’a, Yemen – A total of 16 al-Qaeda suspects appeared before a state security court judge in Sana’a Wednesday charged with carrying out a string of attacks including the killing of two Belgian tourists last year.

The 16 defendants – 11 Yemenis, four Syrians and a Yemeni with Saudi nationality – stood handcuffed behind bars dressed in blue prison uniforms.

According to the charge list, read out by prosecutors at the first hearing, the group was behind the attack on Belgian tourists in the south-eastern province of Hadhramout in January 2008.

Two female Belgian tourists and three Yemeni drivers were killed when gunmen opened fire on their convoy near a historical site in Dowan valley, around 900 kilometres from the capital Sana’a. Another tourist was injured.

The group was also charged with carrying out the March 18, 2008 mortar attack that targeted the US embassy in Sana’a but missed and instead hit an adjacent school, injuring three police officers and four school girls.

Prosecutors said the group was also responsible for the mortar attack that targeted a residential compound housing US and Western citizens on April 6, 2008. No one was hurt in that attack.

They said the group fired two mortar shells at the Italian embassy on April 30, again without casualties.

The most recent attack blamed on the group was the July 25 suicide car bombing at the police complex in Sayoun city of Hadhramout that killed two policemen dead and wounded 18 people, including seven women.

Prosecutors told the court that police had seized explosives and ammunitions with the suspects, including 25 rockets, 43 bags of gun powder, six artillery shells, 13 mortar shells, two explosive vests.

They said the group acted under instructions from the leading member of al-Qaeda in Yemen, Hamza al-Quaiti, who was shot dead in a police raid in Hadhramout last August.

All the defendants rejected the charges, and some of them said they had confessed under duress and torture.

The trial was adjourned until March 17.

Yemen, an impoverished country located on the south-western tip of the Arabian Peninsula, has allied itself with the US-led “war on terror” since the September 11, 2001 attacks. It has since pursued suspected members of al-Qaeda and put scores of them on trial. (dpa)

Imprisoned Brit hate cleric Hamza set to go free

London, Feb.19 (ANI): Hook-handed British hate cleric Abu Hamza could be freed within weeks.

According to the Daily Express, Hamza, jailed on terror charges, will be eligible for early release in May.

He is due to be extradited to the US, but it emerged last night that he is planning a legal “dodge” that should win him his freedom.

Last August Hamza appealed against the decision to kick him out, saying sending him to the US would breach his human rights – but the case is yet to be heard.

Sources say lawyers will argue that as the case could have been started while he was in jail, it is unfair to keep him inside until it begins.

Hamza, 50, was caged for seven years in 2006 on 11 counts of inciting murder and race hate. But he had already been in jail on remand since 2004 and will have a third shaved off his sentence.

Hamza is wanted in the US over alleged terror activities including trying to set up a training camp in Oregon and hostage-taking in Yemen. (ANI)

Banned Jamaat-ud-Dawa resurfaces in Pakistan

Lahore, Feb 6 (ANI): Thousands of supporters of the banned Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the charity arm of terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, held a ‘Kashmir Solidarity Conference’ on The Mall, despite a UN ban on the organisation.

Participants arriving from various districts held black and white JuD flags and shouted their usual slogans. They had gathered under a ‘temporary’ new name, Tehrik-e-Azadi-e-Kashmir (TAK).

The banned charity agreed on the name in a meeting of its divisional leaders from across the country at the Markazul Qadsia in Chauburji on Sunday, the Daily Times quoted sources privy to the meeting, as saying.

A permanent new name has not been finalised as the group continues activism on various issues under various names, an operative said – for example, a movement to protest Israel’s attack on Gaza was named Tehrik-e-Qibla-e-Awwal.

Thursday’s rally was the first public gathering of supporters of the banned charity since the ban. A police contingent was deployed at the scene.

Operatives holding Dawa flags were deputed at various spots in the city to welcome supporters arriving from other districts and collect donations.

Receipts carried the name of the banned charity’s Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation (FIF) trust, and the address: “Department of Revenue, Markazul Qadsia, Chauburji, Lahore”. Telephone numbers were also printed on the receipts.

“The FIF is a Jamaat-ud-Dawa trust but it has not been banned,” a member said.

Another FIF activist, who identified himself as Hamza, said the foundation was not linked to the banned charity and had been working for the independence of Kashmir for a long time. But he did not respond when asked why he was carrying a Dawa flag.

A spokesman for the banned organisation said most of the participants carried his outfit’s flags, but the TAK was a joint forum of various political and religious parties. He asked not to be named. (ANI)

Two militants killed in separate encounters in Kashmir

Srinagar, Jan. 28 (ANI): Two militants including a key Al Badr terrorist, were gunned down in three separate encounters in Jammu and Kashmir on Wednesday. A soldier also lost his life during one operation.

The first encounter broke out on Tuesday evening when militants, hiding in a house, opened fire on security forces during a search operation in Amargarh village.

The on-off firing operation continued till dawn when security forces killed the lone militant hiding in the house. He was identified as Al Badr ultra Abu Hamza.

In the exchange of fire, a jawan of 52 Rashtriya Rifles Sohan Singh lost his life while another jawan was injured, sources said.

In another encounter at Bakihara village in Kupwara District, an unidentified militant was killed while two security men were injured on Wednesday, the sources said.

Another security operation in North Kashmir’s Bandipora District is on.

Acting on specific information that a group of militants had taken shelter in a house at Lone Mohallah in Bandipora, police assisted by the Rashtriya Rifles and CRPF surrounded the premises on Wednesday morning.

The hidden militants opened fire on the joint search party, triggering an intense gun battle. (ANI)