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The Observer (UK)

1) Terror video used to lure UK Muslims
2) Video nasty - 'You have to kill in the name of Allah until you are
killed'


1) Terror video used to lure UK Muslims
============================
Mosque recruitment film shows bin Laden slayings
http://www.guardian.co.uk/ukresponse/story/0,11017,640081,00.html

Jason Burke, chief reporter
Sunday January 27, 2002
The Observer

A gruesome video showing Islamic extremists murdering and mutilating
'infidels' is being circulated in Britain's mosques as part of a recruiting
drive for Osama bin Laden's worldwide terror network.
The video, which was smuggled into the UK only days before the 11 September
attacks, shows people having their throats cut and the wholesale slaughter
of secular forces by a group linked to the world's most wanted terrorist.

It was produced by the Salafist Group for Preaching and War (GSPC), an
extremist Algerian organisation backed by bin Laden and widely regarded as
one of the most active and brutal in its country. GSPC sympathisers then
circulated the film in London.

A second video shows graphic footage of Taliban soldiers decapitating
Northern Alliance opposition troops following a gunfight in Afghanistan. A
number of other videos showing blood-curdling scenes are being sold in
Britain to raise funds for the Islamic 'cause'.

The revelations came as it emerged last night that five more Britons had
been seized by American forces in Afghanistan and were due to be airlifted
to the Camp X-Ray, the special prison set up at Guant�namo Bay in Cuba.

With three Britons already being held in Cuba, the arrests confirm fears in
the intelligence community that Britain is a major recruiting centre for
Muslim radicals prepared to fight for bin Laden.

An Observer investigation has established that some of the recruiting videos
have been distributed among worshippers at the Finsbury Park mosque in north
London. Our reporters last week bought a selection for �10 each. Security
sources believe that extremist activists have been using the videos to
recruit new volunteers.

Two British-born al-Qaeda suspects currently held by the Americans have
attended sermons at Finsbury Park. Richard Reid went on to try to blow up a
Miami-bound passenger jet and Feroz Abbasi, a student drop-out from Croydon,
was captured by the Americans after fighting for the Taliban in Afghanistan.
His mother claimed he had been 'indoctrinated' at the mosque.

The film shows a series of operations by the GSPC in Algeria around 18
months ago. There is graphic footage of the deaths of more than 20 young
conscripts in an ambush. After the soldiers' trucks hit mines laid in a
road, the extremists are seen slitting throats and shooting survivors.
Pictures of government troops, some with their skulls shot away and their
brains exposed, are then shown, followed by images of the Islamists
congratulating each other and offering prayers of thanks.

The commentary calls for 'holy war until judgment day', and tells viewers to
'kill in the name of Allah until you are killed. Then you will win your
place forever in paradise... the war against the Jews and the Christians is
being won.'

Algerian security service investigators called the video 'an appalling
pornographic catalogue of violence' and said they hoped that those
responsible for its distribution would be 'swiftly taken out of
circulation'.

The disclosures will increase pressure on the UK to crack down harder on the
extreme Islamists who have sought sanctuary here from regimes overseas.
Middle Eastern governments have criticised Britain for allowing extremists
to base themselves here. Intelligence officers working in London have
compiled a list of 200 suspected militants from Algeria alone who are in the
UK. Many are believed to be killers.

Security agencies in Spain and France have recently traced links to the UK
from al-Qaeda operatives they have arrested. On 26 September last year six
men belonging to a GSPC terrorist cell in Spain were arrested. They were led
by a militant allegedly trained by bin Laden and had planned hijacks with
two suspected al-Qaeda terrorists who were living in Britain.

�The son of the controversial Muslim cleric Abu Hamza returned to Britain
last night after serving three years in prison in Yemen for plotting a
bombing campaign.

Mohamed Mustafa Kamel, 21, was convicted in August 1999. Four other Britons
are still serving sentences in Yemen, including Muhsin Ghailan, also 21,
thought to be Abu Hamza's stepson.


2) Video nasty
==========
'You have to kill in the name of Allah until you are killed'
http://www.guardian.co.uk/ukresponse/story/0,11017,640142,00.html

An underground film showing the slaughter of Algerian soldiers is being used
as a recruitment tool for British Islamic radicals
Afghanistan - Observer special

Jason Burke
Sunday January 27, 2002
The Observer

The trail runs from a wet corner of a west London street to the dusty
mountains of eastern Algeria, from a garage on the Thames to the
Mediterranean, from a mosque off north London's Seven Sisters Road to Osama
bin Laden's training camps in Afghanistan.
In one direction the trail is a conduit for volunteers and money - both
heading for Islamist rebels fighting a brutal war against Algeria's
government. In the other direction flow political refugees, communiqu�s
boasting of the numbers of 'infidels' murdered each month and, towards the
end of last year, a single smuggled video.

Rumours of the video had been circulating for several weeks. There was even
talk about it in the bazaars of war-wracked cities in eastern Afghanistan.
It was reputed to be of appalling violence - and one of the most effective
recruiting tools ever used by a terrorist group. It was also said to be
circulating in the UK.

The Observer obtained the video last week from a contact within the British
Muslim community. It was worse than anything expected.

According to the badly printed cover, the video, simply entitled 'Algeria',
had been prepared by the 'publicity service (audiovisual section) of the
Groupe Salafiste pour Pr�dication et Combat (Salafist Group for Preaching
and Fighting or GSPC)' - the most radical of the Islamic terrorist groups
who have been fighting the Algerian government for more than 10 years.

The feared GSPC is one of the groups that has refused a recent government
amnesty and truce. It is also closely linked to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda
organisation and is thought to have been set up by some of his closest
lieutenants using the Saudi-born dissident's money.

According to security sources, the first copy of the GSPC video arrived in
the UK just a few days before the 11 September attacks. Since then, bootleg
copies have been passed around Britain's extremists who have been anxious to
play it to potential recruits.

Screenings have been arranged both in private homes and, often after
prayers, in mosques. Many showings have been timed so that young people,
students and schoolchildren, can attend. Several are alleged to have taken
place in Finsbury Park mosque in north London where the radical cleric Abu
Hamza often leads prayers.

There are fears that the video could have been used to indoctrinate
vulnerable young men who have come to the mosque seeking spiritual guidance
following 11 September.

'There are many people at the more radical mosques who come searching for a
purpose in life,' said one former MI5 agent who infiltrated Finsbury Park
mosque.

'They often know very little about Islam and trust the older men to show
them the way. But they are shown the path of violence.'

Both Richard Reid, who was overpowered as he tried to set off explosives in
his shoes on a Paris-to-Miami flight last December, and Feroz Abbasi, the
22-year-old former computer student from Croydon who is currently held in
Guant�namo Bay prison camp by the Americans, attended Finsbury Park.
Abbasi's mother, Juma, last week accused Abu Hamza of brainwashing her son
after he had sought spiritual guidance from him 18 months ago.

Last week at the mosque, where worshippers once included Zacarias Moussaoui,
the suspected twentieth hijacker, and Djamel Beghal, believed to have been
bin Laden's European operations director, The Observer was able to buy
videos showing shocking footage from Afghanistan and Bosnia.

One video called The Mirror of the Jihad showed Taliban forces in
Afghanistan decapitating Northern Alliance soldiers with knives. It was
distributed by an Islamic organisation based in Paddington, London. Another
video, shot in Bosnia, advocated a 'jihad to wipe out atheism'. Each cost
�10.

Extremists are increasingly using videos as a means to drum up support and
publicise their cause. Last year an al-Qaeda video prepared by Osama bin
Laden's group in Afghanistan showing militants training cut with pictures of
Israeli soldiers firing on rioting teenagers in Gaza and the West Bank was
circulated between radicals worshipping at the Finsbury Park mosque. In the
video, bin Laden referred to 'spectacular events to come'.

But none of the videos was as shocking - and as potentially dangerous - as
that obtained by The Observer .

The GSPC video starts with a flickering screen of Arabic script: an
injunction to 'Fight them until the sentence of God is carried out on
Earth.'

Then, with a soundtrack of chanted verses from the Koran, more commands
scroll across the screen. 'You have to kill in the name of Allah until you
are killed,' viewers are told. 'Then you will win your place forever in
Paradise. The whole Islamic world should rise up to fight all the sick
unbelievers. The flag of Jihad will be forever held high.'

The commentary continues: 'Our enemies are fighting in the name of Satan.
You are fighting in the name of God.'

Then clear, bright images take the place of the script. From the bushes
beside a remote mountain road, guerrillas watch the approach of a government
convoy. There is a huge explosion as the trucks hit a bomb, and prolonged
firing.

When the militants get to the scene of the blast they find carnage. There
are corpses strewn across the ground. One hangs over the tailgate; where
once there was a conscript's head there is a mess of bloody matter. Another
lies on the ground with his brains, on which the camera lingers, spread
around his shattered skull. A fighter nonchalantly fires bullets into a
corpse.

Then there is excited shouting as the militants notice that one soldier is
still alive. 'He is moving, he is moving,' calls out a fighter. A militant
calmly bends down and runs a knife across the wounded conscript's throat.
The images of the blood pumping from his severed carotid artery is shown
five times during the video. The throats of the dead on the ground are then
cut too.

Much of the video is less gruesome. A GSPC leader is shown planning an
attack and explaining his tactics to his troops. His men are shown marching
through the dusty scrubland of the Algerian hills. Others are shown baking
bread, making clothes or dividing weapons and ammunitions seized from the
dead government troops. They are show conducting a bizarre ritual: lining up
to be blessed by a comrade dressed in black and representing the 'angel of
death'.

But soon the video reverts to violence. Another attack is shown: an ambush
in which 12 government conscripts - ordinary young men doing their national
service - are killed and eight injured. The dogtags and identity papers of
the dead are held up to the camera.

'God loves people who kill in his name,' the commentary says. 'The enemies
of Islam are scared. The Jews and the Christians know that they have lost
[the war] and want to stop us spreading the truth.'

Algerian security officers learned about the tape soon after it surfaced in
the UK in September. However, although the Algerian ambassador made a formal
complaint to the Foreign Office, MI5 and the police are not believed to have
seized any copies of the tape or arrested any of those involved in its
distribution - despite their identities being widely known.

'We would clearly like to see such a powerful fundraising and recruiting
tool taken out of circulation as soon as possible,' said one Algerian
security source. It is thought that the same tape has been copied and
distributed in France - where there is a large Algerian community, elsewhere
in Europe and throughout the Middle East.

Algerian security services have been liasing closely with their British
counterparts. They told The Observer that the GSPC video has been smuggled
in and distributed by a group of Islamic activists based in west and south
London who have been living in the UK for several years.

The Algerian sources also revealed that there are more than 200 individuals
in the UK who are linked to terrorist activities in Algeria alone. Some are
merely sympathisers or political activists, but the list includes dozens of
men implicated in the murders of policemen, soldiers, government officials
and innocent civilians.

Many have followed the typical path of Islamic radicals: spending years in
Afghanistan during the war against the Soviets before returning to their
home countries to lead extremist Muslim movements. They come to Britain to
flee the resultant government crackdowns.

British police are keen to interview Jordanian-born Abu Qatada, a senior
cleric at the Rossmore Road mosque near Baker Street in London. Qatada was
top of a list of suspects handed to the Home Secretary by the intelligence
services before Christmas to be detained under new internment legislation.

According to one eyewitness, com muniqu�s from the GSPC and other groups
acclaiming the deaths of government troops in militant operations in Algeria
were, at least until recently, frequently posted on the noticeboard at the
Rossmore Road mosque.

British police, who have raided Qatada's West Acton home, are not the only
security agency hoping to trace the cleric. The Americans have named him as
a terrorist suspect and Jordanian police have alleged his involvement in an
abortive attempt to blow up hotels and other tourist sites on Millennium
eve. They claim the plot was masterminded by bin Laden.

The disclosure that the new Algerian tape, which is illegal in the UK, was
circulated with such ease will increase concern about Britain's seeming
inability to round up terror suspects here.

Last week, investigators in Spain said they had discovered that two
suspected al-Qaeda members arrested in Barcelona were in close contact with
other members of the group in Britain.

Court documents show that Najib Chaib, a Spaniard of Moroccan origin who was
arrested eight days ago in Barcelona, made several visits to London where he
met Qatada, who was described by Spanish judge Baltazar Garz�n as 'the
spiritual leader of Mujahideen across Europe'. Qatada, 42, denies all the
charges against him. His lawyer says he is the victim of a 'witch hunt'.

Arab veterans of the Afghan war in London say that, after being granted
asylum in the UK in 1993, Qatada became a magnet for leading dissidents on
the run from the Middle East and Pakistan. Fighters from conflicts in
Afghanistan, Algeria, Egypt and Palestine flocked to his Islamic centre in
White City. In Hamburg, videos of Qatada's lectures were found in the flat
used by Mohamed Atta, who led the terrorist attacks on America. Other
Islamic tracts written by Qatada were found by The Observer among the
effects of fleeing al-Qaeda figures in Pakistan.

On Friday at Finsbury Park mosque hundreds of worshippers from scores of
countries came to pray. In the lobby two vendors sold militant literature
and videos with titles like 'Jihad in Afghanistan' and 'Terror in Chechnya'.
Cassettes of Islamic militant scholar Ahmed Deedat bore titles like 'Why
Islam is the dominant religion' and 'The War Against Rushdie' and there were
several hundred cassettes of speeches given by Abu Hamza on sale for �1.50
each.

Hamza, who lost one eye and a hand in a mine explosion in Afghanistan,
arrived a little after lunchtime, ready to deliver his Friday sermon - the
khutbah. 'We are under constant surveillance here,' he told his supporters.
'But it is always the way with Islam - we have to fight for what we believe
in. Now, more than ever, we have to change people's minds. We have to tell
them the evils of democracy, capitalism and communism.'

A few yards away, the videos were selling well.

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

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