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Terror suspects charged with conspiracy to kill

EIGHT men arrested in anti- terror raids were expected to appear in court today charged with conspiring to commit murder and launch radioactive or chemical attacks on Britain.

They are also charged with planning to use radioactive materials, chemicals, toxic gases or conventional explosives in an attack.

Their arrests two weeks ago followed intelligence from Pakistan and sparked fears of an attack at Heathrow, although the airport was not specifically mentioned in the charges.

Sources said one of the suspects, Dhiren Barot, 32, from Willesden, north-west London, used the alias Abu Eisa al-Hindi.

He was charged under the Terrorism Act with having "reconnaissance plans" which could have been used as a blueprint for an attack on financial institutions in the United States. The plans are alleged to have been for the New York Stock Exchange, Citigroup in New York and the International Monetary Fund in Washington DC.

The buildings were among a string of US financial institutions placed on security alert on 1 August, two days before Barot and the others were arrested in Britain in raids by the Anti-Terrorist Branch and MI5.

Barot is also alleged to have been in possession of two notebooks containing information on explosives, poisons and chemicals.

He and Nadeem Tarmohammed, 26, also from Willesden, were also charged jointly under the Terrorism Act with having reconnaissance plans of the Prudential Building in New Jersey.

Another man, Quaisar Shaffi, 25, also of Willesden, was charged under the Terrorism Act over possession of an extract from the Terrorist’s Handbook, a bomb-making guide available on the internet.

The extract was alleged to contain instructions on preparing chemicals and explosives.

Barot, Tarmohammed and Shaffi were jointly charged with plotting to murder and use explosive or toxic devices with five other men.

They were: Omar Abdul Rehman, 20, of Bushey, Hertfordshire; Zia Ul Haq, 25, of Paddington, London; Abdul Aziz Jalil, 31, of Luton, Bedfordshire; Mohammed Naveed Bhatti, 24, of Harrow, Middlesex; and Junade Feroze, of Blackburn, Lancashire.

All will appear before a district judge tomorrow at Belmarsh magistrates court, next to the high security Belmarsh jail in south-east London.

The US attorney general, John Ashcroft, said prosecutors there were exploring whether there would be any charges across the Atlantic.

A ninth man, Matthew Philip Monks, 32, was charged with possession of a prohibited weapon.

Police had earlier ceased to investigate four others for terrorism offences.

Mudassar Arani, the solicitor for seven of the men, claimed they had been psychologically abused through being held in solitary confinement during two weeks of questioning and, in some cases, stopped from reading the Koran.

Under the current rules enshrined in the Terrorism Act suspects can be held for a maximum of two weeks from the time they are arrested and the men were charged as time ran out.


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Saturday 25 May 2013

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