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Europe
9/11 plotters go on trial at special court in Spain
2005-04-23
EUROPE'S biggest trial of al-Qaeda suspects allegedly linked to the attacks of September 11, 2001, opened yesterday in a specially built court in Madrid.

No one has been successfully prosecuted for a direct role in the attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon. If convicted, Eddin Barakat Yarkas, the Syrian-born alleged ringleader of a Spanish cell, faces some 60,000 years in jail — 25 for each person killed.

Mr Yarkas, also known as Abu Dahdah, is said to have helped to fund the operation and set up a meeting at a Spanish resort attended by Mohammed Atta, the presumed leader of the hijackers, and couriers sent by Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda's leader, to finalise plans for the US attacks.

More than a hundred armed police officers were deployed as the 24 accused were led handcuffed into the court in a park on the outskirts of the capital.

All but one defendant, Tayssir Alluni, sat behind bullet-proof glass. Mr Alluni, a journalist with al-Jazeera, the Qatar-based cable news channel, who interviewed Mr bin Laden after the attacks, is accused of being a member of the terrorist network.

The prosecution is expected to accuse some of the key figures of using trips to Britain to smuggle money to al-Qaeda agents across Europe. Mr Yarkas, 41, is alleged to have visited Britain more than 20 times, often bringing young recruits to meet leading militants, including Abu Qatada, the London-based radical cleric.

The alleged recruits included some of the men accused of planning and taking part in last year's bombing of four trains in Madrid. Baltasar Garzon, the prosecuting magistrate, is expected to give details of some of Mr Yarkas's visits, including one where he is alleged to have handed over $11,000 (£5,750) to Abu Qatada, who the Spanish judge described as "al-Qaeda's spiritual ambassador in the EU". The cleric is one of 12 suspected terrorists under house arrest in Britain.

Mr Yarkas is also said to have stayed at mosques and at the homes of other terrorist suspects, including that of Zacharias Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker who pleaded guilty in an American court yesterday. Also in court in Madrid yesterday was Ghassub al Abrash Ghaylun, who is said to have taken detailed films of the twin towers and the Pentagon. The tapes were then allegedly passed on to "operative members of al-Qaeda and would become the preliminary information on the attacks against the twin towers", the indictment said.

Jose Luis Galän, the only Spanish-born defendant and a convert to Islam, was the first to be questioned by prosecutors. He is accused of undergoing terrorist training at a camp run by al-Qaeda but he denies having any links to the organisation. He described himself as peace-loving and said: "I absolutely condemn all terrorist acts, all violent acts, the spilling of blood of children, women and the elderly."

This trial is the culmination of an eight-year investigation by Señor Garzón, who reckoned that Muslim militants were leading quiet lives as businessmen, labourers or waiters. He said they had operated freely in Spain for years, recruiting men for terrorist training in Afghanistan, preaching holy war and laundering money for al-Qaeda.

All 24 defendants deny the charges against them. Bin Laden is charged with them, but Spain does not try suspects in their absence.

Prosecutors will attempt to prove that some of the accused are linked to the September 11 attacks and the Madrid train bombings. The trial is expected to last for two months and was adjourned until Monday.

As it was getting under way yesterday, another al-Qaeda suspect was being extradited from Switzerland to Spain. Mohamed Achraf's group of Spanish-based extremists is suspected of plotting to bomb the National Court in Madrid.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#2  Isn't that cute? Like they actually care what happened on 9/11. Wonder if he's got Zappy's permission to do anything besides bend over?

Watch out, Spain. The jihadis don't like it when their dhimmis get uppity.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-04-23 10:41:42 AM  

#1  Encase Yarkas (Abu Dahdah) in radioactive glass. After 60,000 years, the radiation levels should have settled to acceptable levels.
Posted by: ed   2005-04-23 8:08:01 AM  

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