New Arrest

By JOHN MILLER
 
This undated image provided by the Idaho State Police shows Fazliddin Kurbanov. Kurbanov, an Uzbekistan national, pleaded not guilty during his first court appearance Friday, May 17, 2013 on U.S. charges that he gave support, cash and other resources to help a recognized terrorist group in his home country plan a terrorist attack there. (AP Photo/Idaho State Police)

This undated image provided by the Idaho State Police shows Fazliddin Kurbanov. Kurbanov, an Uzbekistan national, pleaded not guilty during his first court appearance Friday, May 17, 2013 on U.S. charges that he gave support, cash and other resources to help a recognized terrorist group in his home country plan a terrorist attack there. (AP Photo/Idaho State Police)

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — He was a Russian-speaking truck driver who came to Idaho nearly four years ago to join hundreds of other Uzbekistan refugees for whom the state has become a sanctuary from violence in their home country.

But federal officials say in an indictment that Fazliddin Kurbanov also was teaching people to build bombs that would target public transportation.

It’s unclear whether those alleged targets were domestic or abroad — or how far Kurbanov would have gone. Prosecutors said Friday only that they believe he no longer is a threat.

Kurbanov, 30, was arrested Thursday during a raid of his small apartment south of Boise’s downtown.

Prosecutors charged him with felonies in Idaho and Utah after an extensive investigation into his activities late last year and this year. They allege those activities included assisting a militant group in his native Uzbekistan, a Central Asian country with a southern border with Afghanistan.

‘‘Given his arrest, we believe any potential threat he posed has been contained,’’ U.S Attorney Wendy Olson said. She noted the investigation is ongoing but declined to say whether federal agents are pursuing additional arrests.

Kurbanov said little Friday during his first court appearance, where he pleaded not guilty with help from an interpreter and a federally appointed defense attorney. Kurbanov wore a jail jumpsuit and had dark hair and a beard that was much shorter than the one pictured in his Idaho driver’s license.

Kurbanov lists Uzbek as his first language and Russian as his second in court documents. Federal officials said they will enlist the help of an interpreter again Tuesday when he appears for his detention hearing.

Until then, Kurbanov will be held in the Ada County Jail. His trial on the three counts filed in Idaho is scheduled for July 2.

His lawyer, Richard Rubin, declined to comment.

Kurbanov is among about 650 Uzbeks living in Idaho. He was admitted to the U.S. as a refugee in August 2009, the same month he moved to Boise, said Jan Reeves, director of the Idaho Office for Refugees, citing immigration records. Kurbanov was here legally, federal officials said.

Uzbeks began coming to Idaho’s two refugee settlement centers, in Boise and Twin Falls, in 2003, Reeves said. The centers connect refugees with services such as language classes and help finding work.

The flow of Uzbeks to the state escalated around 2005, when a violent clash between protesters and the government left hundreds dead.

Kurbanov told authorities he had a job driving trucks and listed his only assets as used cars and a small amount of cash in checking and savings accounts.

On Friday, the apartment where he is believed to live had a sign on the door saying ‘‘Please respect our privacy.’’ Nobody responded to a knock. Many immigrants from numerous countries live in the complex, a series of two-level buildings across from a public high school.

Olson said that since Kurbanov’s arrest, she has seen Internet comments blaming Muslims living in Idaho — something she called inappropriate.

‘‘These charges shouldn’t be seen as a reflection on that community,’’ Olson said.

About 90 percent of Uzbeks in their home country are Muslim. Representatives of the Islamic Center of Boise, a meeting place for the region’s Muslim community, didn’t immediately return a phone call Friday.

The Idaho indictment charges Kurbanov with one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization and one count of conspiracy to give material support to terrorists and possession of an unregistered explosive device.

It alleges that between August and May, he knowingly conspired with others to provide resources, including computer software and money, to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which the U.S. has identified as a terrorist organization. The group’s purpose is to overthrow the government of Uzbekistan, said David B. Barlow, U.S. attorney in Utah. The alleged co-conspirators were not named.

The indictment also alleges Kurbanov provided material support to terrorists, knowing it was to be used in preparation for a plot involving the use of a weapon of mass destruction.

On Nov. 15, Kurbanov possessed a series of parts intended to be converted into a bomb, including a hollow hand grenade and aluminum powder, according to the indictment.

A separate federal grand jury in Utah charged Kurbanov with distributing information about bombs. For 10 days in January, Kurbanov taught and demonstrated how to make an ‘‘explosive, destructive device and weapon of mass destruction,’’ the document states.

The Utah indictment, to be handled separately after the Idaho prosecution is resolved, alleges Kurbanov provided recipes for making improvised explosive devices and went on instructional shopping trips in Utah to help illustrate how to create them, Barlow said. Kurbanov also showed Internet videos on the topic, Barlow said.

Although the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan started in the 1990s with the stated aim of overthrowing the Uzbek regime and establishing an Islamic government, its goals have expanded to create a broader Islamic influence in Central Asia.

The movement’s fighters have a presence in Afghanistan’s northern provinces and in Pakistan’s Waziristan province. U.S. and Afghan officials say al-Qaeda has been building ties with the IMU.

Last year, an Uzbek named Ulugbek Kodirov was sentenced to at least 15 years in prison in Alabama for plotting to shoot President Barack Obama. Kodirov pleaded guilty, saying he was acting for the IMU.

Two other Uzbek nationals were arrested in 2012, one in Colorado and another in Pennsylvania, on what the FBI said were related terrorism charges.

According to Idaho’s courts, Kurbanov has no criminal convictions but was ticketed for speeding violations twice last year.

___

Associated Press writers Todd Dvorak in Boise, Brady McCombs in Salt Lake City and Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.end of story marker

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FD Editor’s Note:  And so it goes… here we go again.  After each incident that may or may not be an act of terrorism we have a new wave of Islamophobia.  Then more entrapment cases, and more arrests.  And if you watch closely you will see how incredibly wrong it is to entrap young people, people with their whole lives ahead of them.   People who never would have come up with such an idea until a very skilled FBI informant talked them into it.  Sound crazy?  It is!  But if you go and read this set of articles by Mother Jones, you will understand.

This fear of Islam, fear of Muslims, the idea that most Muslims are violent, Islam teaches violence etc etc etc isn’t even logical.  Think about it.  There are 1.5 Billion Muslims on this planet.  If even 10% of all Muslims were “extremists” the number would be 150,000,000!  So.. where is this “most” coming from?  If that many Muslims were terrorists we would all be toast by now!  But the fact is.. it isn’t true that Islam teaches violence and terrorism`.  That is simply propaganda and make no mistake about it, Robert Spencer, Michele Malkin, Pamela Geller – they make plenty of money selling books,  doing lectures, radio shows and the list goes on.  They make money off of the people who are “on their side.”  Ironic, isn’t it? 


 

Police in Italy have arrested six men they suspect of planning terrorist attacks.

Arrest warrants were issued for the Muslim men, who are accused of targeting the US as well as Italy.

Two men are believed to have escaped to Tunisia.

Police say they found jihadist training videos connected to the men, who were located in Lombardy, Sicily and Puglia as well as Belgium.

“Due to their important international contacts and to the kind of indoctrination they received, we’re sure they would have been able to carry out an attack,” said Mario Parente, General Head of ROS, a special operations group that is part of Italy’s carabinieri police force.

The suspects are accused of conspiracy to commit international terrorism and inciting racial hatred.

Police said the suspects were also setting up training camps in order to prepare for attacks in war zones.

The arrests are part of an operation against a cell in Andria in southern Italy.

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An alleged al-Qaida operative fought with the terror group in Afghanistan and later plotted to bomb American diplomatic facilities in Africa, federal prosecutors in New York said Wednesday.

Ibrahim Suleiman Adnan Adam Harun was captured in 2005 without carrying out the plot targeting U.S. diplomats in Nigeria, prosecutors said. He was extradited to New York City last year and secretly arraigned in federal court in Brooklyn.

An indictment unsealed Wednesday charges Harun with conspiracy, providing material support to al-Qaida and other counts.

An attorney for Harun had no immediate comment. The defendant’s next court appearance was set for Friday.

Harun, 43, was born in Saudi Arabia and arrived in Afghanistan shortly before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks so he could fight with an al-Qaida jihad force against U.S. troops, prosecutors said. After receiving further training from the terror group, he allegedly traveled to Africa with orders to attack the U.S. diplomatic sites.

Authorities said they believe Harun killed American soldiers during his time on the battlefield, where he was known as the “White Rose.” They also said the bomb conspiracy had targeted the U.S. embassy in Abuja and a consulate in another Nigerian city, but they provided no further details about the failed plot.

Harun tried to flee to Europe after a co-conspirator’s arrest, but he was detained in 2005 in Libya while en route and remained there until June 2011, prosecutors said. After that, Italian authorities arrested him on charges that he assaulted officers on board a refugee ship bound for Italy, and was there until his extradition on the U.S. indictment.

“The defendant was a prototype al-Qaeda operative, trained by al-Qaeda in terrorist tradecraft, deployed to fight American servicemen, and dispatched to commit terrorist attacks throughout the world,” U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch said in statement. “Whether they try to attack our servicemen on the battlefield, or scheme to kill our diplomats and citizens in embassies abroad, terrorists will find no refuge.”

Harun faces a possible life sentence if convicted.

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By Abdul Basith MA, TwoCircles.net,

Kozhikode: Eminent intellectuals, human rights activists from different faiths and community leaders have expressed deep concern at the rise in arrest of innocent Muslim youths on terror charges – many of them fabricated ones.

At a meeting of Students Islamic Organisation [SIO] over framing of Muslim students by Bangalore Police, the eminent citizens conveyed a strong message against the State attempt to alienate them from professional, science and technological fields by framing them as terrorists.

Karnataka leader of Jamaat-e-Islami Hind, Maulana Wahiduddin Khan while addressing the meet organised at Town Hall, Kozhikode said that it is high time the Muslims especially in Kerala come up with a multi-dimensional defence against the state tactics by taking many a secular unbiased minds with them. The defence should be as such to demand more transparency from the part of the Police over the recent arrest of Muslim students and professionals, as until now they weren’t able to provide any convincing explanation despite continuous demand from the part of civil rights groups like Association for Protection of Civil Rights [APCR]. His speech in Urdu was translated to Malayalam by Rafeeq Rahman.

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By DAVID RISING

Germany Salafists

A police officer leaves a house where
the head of an ultraconservative
Islamic Salafist group lived after
searching for evidence, in Cologne ,
western Germany, Thursday
June 14, 2012.
(AP Photo/dapd/Roberto Pfeil)

BERLIN — German authorities launched a nationwide crackdown Thursday on an ultraconservative Islamic organization, raiding homes, meeting halls and mosques, while banning one related group and opening in an investigation of two others.

Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said he had banned the Salafist organization Millatu Ibrahim, saying it has been calling on Muslims to fight against Germany’s “constitutional order.”

The raids, conducted by 850 police officers in seven of Germany’s 16 states, focused on two other groups – DawaFFM and DWR – to determine whether evidence exists to ban them as well. DWR’s initials are the German abbreviation for “The True Religion.

Friedrich said a “comprehensive collection of evidence” had been seized – videos, laptops, cellphones and other items. “All these things will be evaluated over the coming days, and we will see to what extent the evidence is sufficient to ban the two organizations which are being investigated,” he said.

Friedrich said authorities believed there were preparations under way to replace the German constitutional state with Sharia law, and warned that anyone who does so can expect to face prosecution.

Among other things, Millatu Ibrahim taught followers to reject German law and follow Islamic Shariah law and that “the unbelievers are the enemy,” a German security official said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Germany’s intelligence and security agencies have increasingly been monitoring the actions of the Salafists, who number some 4,000 in Germany, in recent months.

That monitoring was intensified in May, after street clashes between Salafists and the small far-right Pro NRW party in Bonn and Solingen, in western Germany.

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German police have launched a nationwide crackdown on a group of radical Islamists known as Salafists.

Officers raided 70 properties in Berlin, Cologne and other cities.

There are some four thousand Salafists in Germany. They adhere to a hardline interpretation of Sunni Islam.

German authorities believe one Salafist group wanted to establish an Islamic caliphate under Sharia.

Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said the Millatu Ibrahim organisation has now been banned because it is “against our constitutional order and the philosophy of our nations.”

In April, another Salafist group named “The House of Quran” hit the headlines with its vow to distribute 25 million free copies of the Muslim holy book.

The group said it wanted to save non Muslims from hell.

Germany’s interior ministry ruled the move was legal, but ordered intelligence services to actively monitor those involved.

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FD Editor’s Note:  How many of us either have or have had this or a document like it to read just out of curiosity,  educational purpose?  What about college students who are talking Middle East history courses?  And finally I know without a shadow of a doubt that the Islamophobe sites have it!  Sites like “jihadwatch” and others.  Why isn’t Robert Spencer being arrested in that case?  What about all those “wannabe terrorism experts” out there like him?  I’ll bet this is on every single one of their computers, and I’ll also bet that it’s on countless computer lab PCs at colleges and Universities. 

You may remember the case of Nouriddine Malki who was arrested and part of the “evidence” against him were some silly cartoons of the twin towers.  I saw that political cartoon circulating all over the place.  Yet no one else was arrested.  Nour was.  He is still sitting in a CMU because of it.  These incidents are outrageous!  When will this end? This happened in the UK, but it happens a lot in the US as well.

Thanks to the Patriot Act and the new Defense Bill they can do this whenever they feel like it.  This is the price of apathy, of not taking a stand and screaming, “NO MORE!”  Please get politically active.  Write your representatives.  Get involved in politics in your area.  TELL OTHERS because a lot of people only know what they see on TV “news.”  We are the proverbial frog in the kettle, the heat being slowly turned up.  We must say stop!  And do something.  The persecution of an entire religion, the second largest in the world, is in full swing.


 
Mohammed Shabir Ali, 24, is alleged to have possessed copy of 44 Ways to Support Jihad by Anwar al-Awlaki for over two years
Anwar al-Awlaki

A man has been charged with terrorism offences over the alleged possession of a document by Anwar al-Awlaki, the al-Qaida preacher who was killed last year by a US drone strike in Yemen.

Mohammed Shabir Ali, 24, of east London, is accused of possessing 44 Ways to Support Jihad between 20 August 2008 and 21 June 2011.

The Metropolitan police said that the document was “of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism”.

Ali has also been charged with intending, during the same period, to assist another person to commit acts of terrorism.

Ali, who was arrested on Monday, will appear at Westminster magistrates’ court on Wednesday.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said two men, aged 24 and 30, and a 21-year-old woman, remained in police custody following their arrest on Monday.

The woman and the 30-year-old man were arrested at residential addresses in east London while the 24-year-old man was arrested at a business address in west London.

Awlaki, a US-Yemeni radical Muslim cleric, was linked to a series of attacks and plots around the world, including the shootings at Fort Hood, Texas, in November 2009, and the activities of the ‘underwear bomber’, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.

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Police arrest 19 people in Toulouse and other cities in raids President Nicolas Sarkozy says targeted “radical Islam”.

French police have arrested 19 people in dawn raids across a number of cities, as President Nicolas Sarkozy cracked down on what he termed “radical Islam” just weeks ahead of a presidential poll in which he is seeking re-election.

Several of the arrests on Friday occured in the southwestern city of Toulouse, where an al-Qaeda inspired gunman carried out a series of attacks earlier this month that left seven people dead.

Agents from the domestic intelligence agency (DCRI) and elite police carried out the dawn raids in Toulouse, the Paris region, Nantes in the west, Lyon in the southeast and the Provence region.

Three of the 19 suspects arrested were women, police said.

Judicial sources said 17 of those arrested were being held for questioning.

A senior police source told the AFP news agency that authorities had up to 100 suspected Muslim radicals in their sights and Sarkozy said Friday’s operation was only a start.

Presidential campaign

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FD Editor’s Note:  One word – ludicrous!

By Robert Moran

A Philadelphia man was arrested Thursday and charged with aiding a group that has conducted terrorist attacks on U.S. forces in Afghanistan, federal prosecutors said.

Bakhtiyor Jumaev, 45, of Port Richmond, was charged with one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization.

Jumaev was caught on a wiretap saying he wanted to “join the wedding,” which prosecutors say was a reference to terrorist attacks. But his only real contribution, they say, was a $300 check.

Jumaev gave the contribution to Jamshid Muhtorov, who was arrested Jan. 21 at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. Muhtorov was carrying $2,800 in cash when he tried to catch a flight to Istanbul, Turkey, according to the criminal complaints filed against both men.

Prosecutors allege Jumaev intended for his contribution be delivered to the Islamic Jihad Union, a group that originated in Uzbekistan and that has committed suicide bombings and other attacks since 2004.

The group killed 47 people at a bazaar and police checkpoints and conducted simultaneous suicide bombings against the U.S. and Israeli Embassies. In 2008, it claimed responsibility for an attack against a U.S. military post in Afghanistan.

The United States has designated it a terrorist organization since June 2005.

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New Delhi: The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has called for a probe into the issue of “illegal” picking up of Muslim youths in terror cases by the Special Cell of the Delhi Police in the last week of November 2011. The rights panel has ordered the police to investigate the matter and submit a report within four weeks.

In a letter dated December 22, 2011, the NHRC has ordered the Sarita Vihar Deputy Commissioner of Police to “issue notice to the concerned authority calling for the report within four weeks.”

After that period, the rights panel will be free to take action on its own, the letter further said, a copy of which has also been sent to the Deputy Commissioner of Delhi Police (Vigilance).

The NHRC response came after Faisal Khan, a social activist, had filed a written complaint against the Special Cell of the Delhi Police.

In his written complaint to the NHRC, Khan had alleged that way the Special Cell picked up Gauhar Aziz Khomani and Mohammed Irshad Khan, the alleged members of ‘Indian Mujahideen,’  was in violation of the Supreme Court guidelines on arrests. Khan alleged that the police failed to inform their families even after several days of their arrests.

The Supreme Court’s directive as enunciated in the D. K. Basu Guidelines say that within 8-12 hours of making any arrests the police must inform the family of the person concerned about his arrest and the location where s/he has been kept by the police.

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