Failure to prove trans-Atlantic bombing plot, blow to Britains anti-terrorist effort
September 9th, 2008 - 3:49 pm ICT by ANILondon, Sep 9 (ANI): British police and prosecutors were locked in crisis meetings last night after what they believed to be the strongest terrorism case ever presented to a court was rejected by a jury, which will prove to a severe blow to Britains anti-terrorist effort.
At the end of a 10 million pound investigation and trial lasting more than two years, jurors were unable to decide whether or not a group of British Muslims were part of a plot to blow transatlantic airliners out of the sky, The Times reported.
The outcome of the case - which featured al-Qaeda-style martyrdom videos made by six defendants - will be seen as a severe blow to Britains anti-terrorist effort.
Three men were convicted of conspiracy to murder, but the jury was deadlocked on the central allegation, that terrorists planned to use liquid bombs to destroy aircraft en route from Heathrow to cities in the United States and Canada.
The jurys indecision in the face of a detailed Crown case raises questions about the public perception of the terror threat that could undermine government attempts to introduce further security legislation.
The Crown Prosecution Service indicated that it was likely to seek the retrial of seven men in an attempt to prove that there was a plan to attack aircraft and kill thousands of people.
The discovery of the plot, in August 2006, led to a global security clamp-down at airports that paralysed international travel. The alert resulted in restrictions on carrying liquids in cabin baggage that remain in force and are unlikely to be relaxed.
Retrials are being sought even though the jury at Woolwich Crown Court convicted three of the eight defendants of conspiracy to murder.
Andy Hayman, former assistant commissioner for special operations, said: This was one of our strongest cases there will have to be an intensive debrief. But now is not the time for that, now is the time to prepare for retrials.
The men convicted of conspiracy to murder were Ahmed Abdulla Ali and Tanvir Hussain, both 27 and from Walthamstow, northeast London, and Assad Sarwar, 28, of High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. The four men on whom the jury failed to reach verdicts were Ibrahim Savant, 27, Arafat Waheed Khan, 27, Waheed Zaman, 24, and Umar Islam, 30.
Mohammed Gulzar, 27, from Birmingham, was acquitted on charges of conspiracy to murder and conspiring to murder by blowing up aircraft.
He had vigorously denied any involvement. The Crown had alleged that Gulzar, who arrived in Britain using a false name during July 2006, was a key figure in the alleged airline plot but the jury rejected that case.
Home Office sources said that Gulzar would be the subject of a control order and it is expected that police in connection with a serious criminal offence committed in Birmingham in 2002 will question him. Another key figure in the plot, Rashid Rauf, is on the run in Pakistan after escaping from custody.
Four further trials related to the alleged airline plot are pending. (ANI)
- Airline bomb trial: Five potential suicide bombers ''still at large'' - Sep 09, 2008
- Three Brit Muslims awarded 20 years imprisonment in airline bombing plot - Jul 13, 2010
- Three guilty of airline bomb plot bigger than 9/11 - Sep 08, 2009
- UK court told Al Qaeda terrorists had planned to blow up 10,000 people - Sep 08, 2009
- Britain to free 100 peisoners - Jun 13, 2011
- 'Drunk' juror falls asleep during trial - Mar 22, 2012
- US charges two men for planning to kill Saudi envoy - Oct 12, 2011
- Pak Qaeda hand in 2006 trans-Atlantic bomb plot revealed - Sep 08, 2009
- 'Pakistan controlled' British terrorists get 108 years (Lead) - Sep 14, 2009
- Muslim pilot fired over fears he might copy 9/11 - Jan 29, 2012
- US undermined British investigation into al-Qaeda airline bomb plot - Sep 08, 2009
- Pakistan has not yet requested Britain for Musharraf's extradition: Cameron - Apr 06, 2011
- Terrorists are British, not Pakistani: Islamabad tells London - Sep 09, 2009
- Transatlantic airliners bombing plot mastermind roaming free on British streets - Sep 13, 2009
- British Airways employee conspired with al-Awlaki to blow up US bound flight - Feb 02, 2011
Tags: british muslims, cabin baggage, cities in the united states, crown prosecution service, government attempts, liquid bombs, martyrdom videos, public perception, security legislation, terror threat