American says he trained terrorists, cheered videos of 9/11


POSTED: 8:32 p.m. EDT, April 30, 2007 


Story Highlights

. FBI informant said he nurtured a generation of homegrown British
terrorists
. Mohammed Junaid Babar testified in terror case against fertilizer bomb
plotters 
. Babar described the inner workings of terrorist training camps
. Virtual armory in house; firing range in backyard 
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/04/30/bomb.plot.ap/index.html

LONDON, England (AP) -- An American computer programmer who later became an
FBI informant told a British court during 17 days of testimony that he ran
training camps in Pakistan for Islamic militants and nurtured a generation
of homegrown British terrorists.

Mohammed Junaid Babar's testimony in the yearlong trial of five men
convicted Monday of a plot to bomb targets in London revealed how
disaffected Britons were trained for terrorism in Pakistan, where many have
family ties.

Flanked by U.S. marshals on the witness stand, Babar -- who prosecutors said
is the first FBI informant to testify in a British terror case -- described
how the plot developed in the cramped mosques of suburban England and the
hills of Pakistan's tribal belt.

It was his testimony that cemented ties between the 2005 al Qaeda-linked
attack on London's transit system and the five men sentenced to life in
prison for plotting to detonate a bomb made of a half ton of fertilizer in
the city. (
<http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/04/30/terror.verdict/index.html> Full
story)

A naturalized American from Pakistan, Babar was an associate of the
ringleader of the deadly July 7, 2005, transit attack in London, the
fertilizer bomb plotters and a group who cased Britain's luxury hotels and
targets on Wall Street, law enforcement officials said.

Babar pleaded guilty in the United States in 2004 to smuggling money and
military supplies to a senior al Qaeda figure and awaits sentencing.


The path to terrorism


The slightly built Yankees fan from Queens described how he mingled with
radicals from the fall of 2001, when he quit a job as a computer programmer
and left New York for Lahore -- saying he was radicalized by the U.S.-led
invasion of Afghanistan.

In 2002, Babar was involved in two plots to assassinate Pakistan's
president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, he said in testimony.

Two years later, having won the trust of senior al Qaeda leaders, he
traveled to the Pakistani province of Waziristan to supply cash and night
vision goggles as the terror network held a clandestine summit.

Babar's house and office in Lahore became a magnet for young militants -- an
outpost of Britain's al-Muhajiroun militant Islamic group that was banned by
British authorities after members praised the September 11 attacks.

His home was also a virtual armory: A kitchen spice rack was packed with
jars of chemicals, and aluminum powder and fertilizer for making bombs were
stuffed in a bedroom cupboard.

The backyard was a makeshift firing range, Babar testified. Buried close by
was a cache of AK-47 rifles, grenades and ammunition.

Babar, who was given immunity from prosecution in Britain in exchange for
his testimony in March and April 2006, told the court he organized a series
of training camps in northern Pakistan in 2003.

Wearing a neatly trimmed beard and glasses, Babar told the court that Omar
Khyam, head of the fertilizer bomb plotters, assisted in setting up camps --
telling recruits al Qaeda would be there to select operatives.

Khyam claimed al Qaeda chiefs urged him to plan "multiple bombings ...
either simultaneously or on the same day" in Britain, Babar told the court.

Among pupils at their camps was the ringleader of the London transit
bombings, Mohammed Siddique Khan, who experimented with explosives along the
frontier with Afghanistan, Babar said.

He said Khyam also tried at one point to arrange training on how to hijack
airplanes from a Kashmiri terror group.

Babar told jurors that during visits to Britain in 2002, he and several
others had cheered videos of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United
States and heard speeches by radical British cleric Abu Hamza al-Masri,
jailed in 2006 for soliciting murder.

"We were shown a couple of videos, video wills of those people who carried
out 9/11," Babar said. "Everyone at the meeting agreed with it, everyone was
in praise of those who carried it out."

Arrested in New York in 2004, Babar has since given evidence to prosecutors
in Britain, the United States and Pakistan.

Copyright 2007 The  <http://www.cnn.com/interactive_legal.html#AP>
Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
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