From the Los Angeles Times
Bomb plot suspects had other targets in mind, London court told
Prosecutors
say the eight men charged with plotting to blow up airliners also had
information and photos on other targets in Britain and the U.S.
By Kim Murphy
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
3:57 PM PDT, April 4, 2008
LONDON —
A group of young British Muslims accused of plotting to blow up
transatlantic jetliners had accumulated files on a wide range of other
potential targets, including a tunnel under the River Thames at
Greenwich, a major gas pipeline and the "top 20 holiday destinations"
in the United States, a prosecutor said Friday.
In the second day of the trial of the eight men on charges of
conspiracy to commit murder and acts of terrorism, prosecutors
presented surveillance of a "bomb factory" the men allegedly set up in
a rundown London apartment. The prosecution also played portions of six
"martyrdom videos" in which the men declared their readiness to be
killed attacking the U.S. and Britain for their roles in Iraq,
Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories.
The young solemn-faced men in the videos acknowledge that they are not
foreign antagonists but British citizens, raised in the West but
determined to punish what they saw as the complacency of fellow
citizens in the face of Muslim suffering.
"I do not consider anyone innocent . . . while their sons and their
daughters and their soldiers or whatever are . . . pillaging the Muslim
lands of its resources and dishonoring our Muslim brothers and
sisters," Umar Islam, 29, said against the backdrop of a black flag
inscribed in Arabic, in a video partially played to the jury.
"Most of you are too busy, you know, watching 'Home and Away' and
'EastEnders,' complaining about the World Cup, drinking your alcohol,
to even care [about] anything," he said of fellow Britons. "I know,
because I've come from that."
Tanvir Hussain, 27, said in his video that the group was aiming at
"economic, government and military" targets.
"Collateral damage is going to be inevitable, and people are going to
die, because, you know, it's work at a price," Hussain said. "I only
wish I could do this again, you know, come back and . . . just do it
again and again until people come to their senses and realize, you
know, don't mess with the Muslims."
Following the arrests of nearly two dozen suspects in August 2006,
British authorities were tight-lipped about the investigation, dubbed
Operation Overt, which triggered the arrests and weeks of searches
throughout suburban London.
Only as the trial has opened in London's Woolwich Crown Court has the
massive extent of the police surveillance operation become apparent.
Prosecutor Peter Wright has presented a detailed picture of a group of
disparate men in their 20s united in their determination to blow up at
least seven transatlantic passenger jets with homemade liquid
explosives disguised as soft drinks.
The evidence includes surveillance of the men on shopping trips to
buy suitcases, wires, batteries and large quantities of explosive
hydrogen peroxide.
Photos shown to the jury show the suspects entering and leaving
the Walthamstow area apartment that was purchased for $280,000 and
stocked with the makings of their would-be bombs. Records of searches
reveal stashes of bomb-making equipment in woods near the suspects'
homes and CDs featuring videos of beheadings, executions and roadside
bombs killing U.S. servicemen in Iraq -- along with computer files
containing what prosecutors say were plans for suicide bombings and
lists of what authorities believe were targets.
Two compact discs found at one of the suspects' houses had 25
photographs of the area around a 1,217-foot pedestrian tunnel under the
Thames, along with photographs of a nearby university campus and closed
circuit television camera locations.
Files on computer memory sticks included information about a key gas
pipeline linking Belgium and Britain, the British electricity grid, the
nation's major Internet service provider exchange, the new control
tower at Heathrow airport, several oil refineries and nuclear power
stations.
In surveillance tapes made after police planted a bug in the
Walthamstow apartment, Hussain and a man identified as one of the major
ringleaders, Abdullah Ahmed Ali, 27, discussed "locations in the USA"
and "the desire to find out the 10 most popular destinations for
British travelers," Wright told the jury.
And in a hint that the defendants may not have been acting alone,
prosecutors revealed passport records and tickets showing that one of
the defendants, Assad Sarwar, 27, had flown to Pakistan just two months
before his arrest.
Wright also read from handwritten quotations found at Ali's house,
noting that the defendant had a wife and 9-month-old son at the time of
his arrest.
"If I was given the news that I will be marrying the most beautiful
wife and the news of having a baby boy just born," it said, "it is more
dear to my heart that I'll be waiting in a tent in the cold, dark,
chilly wind, waiting for dawn so that I may attack the enemy."
At that point, Justice David Calvert-Smith prepared to dismiss the jury
for the weekend.
"Go home, and as best you can, empty your minds," he admonished. "And
by Sunday night, maybe you won't be thinking of what Mr. Wright's been
telling you."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times