http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2006\12\24\story_24-12-2006_pg7_18

Police hunt for 'English brothers' who spent year in Al Qaeda camp

* Gang smuggled into Afghanistan include 9 Britons, 2 Norwegians, Australian
* Terror suspect denies charges about Heathrow plot

Daily Times Monitor

LAHORE: Police are trying to trace a gang of British Muslims who are 
thought to have returned to plot terror attacks in Britain after being 
trained abroad for more than a year by Al Qaeda.

Nine Britons, all said to be in their twenties, were among a group of 12 
Western recruits groomed by Al Qaeda at a secret camp near the Afghan 
border to set up new terror cells in London and other Western capitals.

Police do not know the real identities of this gang, who are known as 
the "English brothers" because of their shared language. As well as nine 
Britons, they include two Norwegians and an Australian who were smuggled 
into the Waziristan tribal region in Pakistan in October 2005.

They are believed to have been under the command of an Al Qaeda veteran 
suspected of training some of the Britons accused of the alleged plot to 
blow up passenger planes flying to the US from Heathrow airport in the 
summer.

The intensive manhunt for the "English brothers" was revealed to The 
Times as the alleged British mastermind of the Heathrow plot spoke for 
the first time as he appeared yesterday in a court in Pakistan on 
separate charges. Outside court, he vehemently denied any role in plans 
to bomb up to ten transatlantic flights.

Rashid Rauf, 25, from Birmingham, had not been seen in public since his 
arrest in August by Pakistani intelligence chiefs, who claimed that he 
was the key figure in the foiled operation.

Talking to The Times inside a crowded court in Rawalpindi, Mr Rauf, who 
was manacled hand and foot, said of the accusations: "The charges are 
all fabricated. It is an injustice, there is no evidence against me."

A tall, lean figure with a long unruly beard and his head covered by an 
embroidered shawl, Mr Rauf smiled when asked if he fears being returned 
to Britain to stand trial. Senior officials in Pakistan have told The 
Times that diplomatic efforts are under way to transfer Mr Rauf to 
Britain, where detectives want to question him about the alleged 
Heathrow plot and possible links to the 7/7 London suicide bombers.

Police are keen to learn whether he met two of the 7/7 bombers, Mohammad 
Sidique Khan and Shehzad Tanweer, who are known to have visited Pakistan 
shortly before they and two other British Muslims blew up three 
Underground trains and a bus, killing 52 people in London in July 2005.

The alert over the whereabouts of the "English brothers" came as Sir Ian 
Blair, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, cautioned about "an 
unparalleled and growing threat of attack". He said that the terrorist 
threat was "far graver" than any posed during the Second World War, the 
Cold War or IRA campaigns.

Sir Ian, speaking on the Today programme on BBC Radio 4, said that he 
had no specific intelligence about an imminent attack but the threat was 
"ever present".

Intelligence sources in Pakistan said that the men are reported to have 
joined Taliban and Al Qaeda fighters in Afghanistan in attacks on NATO 
troops. The sources told The Times that the "brothers" were given 
religious indoctrination as well as lessons on how to assemble suicide 
bomb vests and improvised explosives devices. The sources are reported 
to have been escorted to the Al Qaeda camp by Adam Gadahn, a Californian 
indicted by US authorities as an Al Qaeda terrorist, who introduced the 
"brothers" to their tutors.

+++



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