http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0608140207aug14,1,5591200
.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed
 

British: 4 plots thwarted in past year


1 suspect called leader of Al Qaeda in Britain

By Tom Hundley and Aamer Madhani, Tribune staff reporters. Tribune senior
correspondent John Crewdson in London and Tribune foreign correspondent Kim
Barker in Islamabad contributed to this report

August 14, 2006

LONDON -- At least four major terror plots have been foiled since last
year's July 7 attack on the London transport system, according to British
Home Secretary John Reid.

Reid also confirmed Sunday that about two dozen terror investigations are in
progress across Britain.

"I'm not going to confirm the exact number, but I wouldn't deny that [two
dozen] would indicate the number of major conspiracies that we are trying to
look at," Reid told the British Broadcasting Corp.

While anti-terrorist police continue to question 23 suspects arrested last
week in the alleged plot to detonate bombs on flights from Britain to the
U.S., the Sunday Times newspaper reported that one of those detained is
believed to be the leader of Al Qaeda in Britain.



Alleged hub of extremists

Quoting unnamed Home Office officials, the London newspaper said the alleged
Al Qaeda leader serves as the hub in a network of North African and
Pakistani extremist groups based in Britain.

The suspect, who cannot be named in Britain for legal reasons, is reported
to have set up "pipelines" that sent recruits from the British Muslim
community to training camps in Pakistan or directly to Iraq, where they
joined the anti-U.S. insurgency.

All of the suspects arrested last week are believed to be British-born
Muslims. Most are of Pakistani origin, but three are non-Asian converts to
Islam.

At least five of the suspects learned bombmaking techniques in Al Qaeda
camps on the Afghan-Pakistani border, the Sunday Telegraph newspaper
reported. Several of the suspects also videotaped "martyrdom messages" that
were supposed to have been played after the successful execution of their
plot, according to Pakistani security sources quoted in the British media.

Few details of the inner workings of last week's thwarted plot have been
disclosed by Britain's anti-terror authorities, but Pakistani security
sources say that MI5, the British intelligence agency, used an informant to
penetrate the terror network. As the plot took shape, Rashid Rauf, 29, a
Birmingham resident who was spending a lot of time in Pakistan, emerged as a
key figure.

Rauf's phone calls and Internet messages were monitored by Pakistani
security forces. His arrest early this month by Pakistani police apparently
triggered a chain of events, including a message from an associate to
activate the plot, which prompted British authorities to move quickly to
arrest the conspirators.

According to news reports in Pakistan, a British-based Islamic charity
helped fund the planned attack by transferring money to three people in
three accounts in the Mirpur area of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir in
December. The money was supposed to be for earthquake relief. The Rauf
family is prominent in Mirpur.

Among those arrested last week was Tayib Rauf, 22, the brother of Rashid and
a resident of Birmingham.

As the British public grasps the enormity of the terror threat that has
apparently taken root in its midst, there were concerns about a backlash
against the country's large Muslim community, and also about an adverse
reaction from a community that feels itself increasingly under siege.



Many Muslims doubt charges

In Birmingham, a gritty Midlands industrial city, many in the Muslim
community remained skeptical about the plot. Before evening prayers at the
Birmingham Central Mosque on Sunday, worshiper Ali Ditta said he didn't
think the accused were capable of pulling off such a complex scheme. Ditta,
like many in the community, said he feared the government was conspiring
against the nation's Islamic community to bolster its Middle East policy.

"This is nothing more than a diversion," Ditta said. "Blair and Bush are
trying to move the attention away from how they have allowed the Israelis to
kill hundreds of innocent Muslims and the terrible policies in Palestine and
Iraq."

Over the weekend, Muslim leaders took out advertisements in several national
newspapers in which they placed blamed on the British government's policies
in the Muslim world, arguing that it is pushing young Muslims toward
extremism. But Sheikh Mahmood Rashid, the chairman of the Islamic Cultural
Study Circle, said that both the government and the immigrant Islamic
community share the blame for so many young Muslim men edging toward
extremism.

"Many communities' imams have promoted emotional issues that could push
[young Muslims] toward extremism," Rashid said. "The British government and
institutions also have done a very poor job in learning to understand the
views of its Muslim people."



10 suspects from 1 community

The east London district of Walthamstow, an ethnic stew of Pakistanis,
Bangladeshis, Turks, Eastern Europeans and Caribbean islanders, is home to
10 of the alleged plotters.

Carol Vincent, a local activist, doesn't expect trouble in the community
because of the arrests. But she said she and her friends here simply don't
believe that the 10 young men from Walthamstow are guilty of terrorism. She
noted that no charges have been filed and that at least one of those
arrested last week has been released.

"Innocent until proven guilty," she declared.

Meanwhile, heightened security measures continued to frustrate air
travelers. About a third of the flights scheduled to leave London's Heathrow
Airport were canceled Sunday, and many others were delayed.

British Airways and other carriers are blaming the British Airports
Authority, which is responsible for security at the airport, for failing to
cope with the stepped-up precautions that were mandated after last week's
terror threat.

Reid, the home secretary, said the stringent searches and restrictions on
carry-on baggage are being reviewed, but he gave no indication that they
would be lifted soon. The opposition Conservative Party has called for
troops to be sent to the airports to help with security checks.


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