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Al-Qaida claims London bombing
Aljazeera has aired a clip from an al-Qaida video in which one of the London bombers explains his reasons for the July attacks on the British capital. Al-Qaida's second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, also appeared on the video on Thursday, promising similar attacks in the future. London bomber Muhammad Sadiq Khan, a 30-year-old British national from West Yorkshire, said responsibility for the attacks on European and US cities fell squarely on the shoulders of the West. He explained the West was backing governments that were carrying out crimes against humanity.

In four bombings on the London transport system on 7 July, 56 people were killed. London police believe Khan was the leader of the suicide bombers. Khan also said that "Western citizens" should no longer feel safe and that they would be the target of similar operations. Aljazeera said it would air the full tape later in the evening, when the text would be made available.

Al-Zawahiri also spoke at some length on the reasons for the London attacks, and described them as "a slap to the policy of British Prime Minister Tony Blair". However, he placed the responsibility on Blair, characterising the blasts as a response to UK foreign policy "just as 9/11 was a response to America's". Further, al-Zawahiri promised similar operations in "enemy territory" in the near future, particularly Europe - because it had ignored an offer of truce from al-Qaida's leader, Osama bin Ladin.

Last December, bin Ladin called for a boycott of Iraq's elections and endorsed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi as his deputy in the country in an audiotape broadcast by Aljazeera. The message condemned the 30 January elections to elect a national assembly that will draft a new constitution. "In the balance of Islam, this constitution is infidel and therefore everyone who participates in this election will be considered an infidel," he said. "Beware of henchmen who speak in the name of Islamic parties and groups who urge people to participate" in the election. He also described al-Zarqawi as the "amir" of al-Qaida in Iraq and called upon Muslims there "to listen to him". Bin Ladin had added that his al-Zarqawi announcement was "a great step on the path of unifying all the mujahidin in establishing the state of righteousness and ending the state of injustice".

Muhammad Sadiq Khan, along with two other young British Muslims of Pakistani origin and a fourth Jamaican-born Briton, blew themselves up on three underground trains and a bus in London on 7 July. Khan visited Pakistan along with another of the bombers last year, where religious schools have been under scrutiny after some were accused of breeding extremism. Pakistani security forces have also been searching for members of al-Qaida in remote areas of the country recently. London's police chief Ian Blair said the bombings bore all the hallmarks of an al-Qaida operation as it was a multiple coordinated attack on a city's transport system.
Posted by: Wayne Bin Rooney 2005-09-01
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=128355