http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19902833-601,00.html

Accused cleric hoped to 'kill 1000'
Natasha Robinson 
July 25, 2006
SUBURBAN Islamic cleric Abdul Nacer Benbrika wanted to kill 1000 Australians to 
"please Allah" and had the support of a blond recruit who had pledged violent 
jihad during a meeting with Osama bin Laden.
A Melbourne court heard yesterday that a witness would reveal that Shane Kent, 
29, received weapons and explosives training at the Taliban-run al-Faruq 
training camp for foreign jihadis in Afghanistan. 

And at a meeting with bin Laden in that country, Mr Kent, from Meadow Heights 
in Melbourne's north, allegedly committed himself to violent jihad. The alleged 
Melbourne terror cell's spiritual leader, Mr Benbrika embraced Mr Kent as part 
of his clique, the court heard, saying: "He's good, and he doesn't talk too 
much." 

Mr Benbrika encouraged his devotees to plan a large-scale terrorist attack, 
which police foiled during its "developmental stages", the court heard during 
the opening day of the committal hearing of 13 suspects yesterday. 

"If you kill, we kill here 1000," Mr Benbrika allegedly said in a conversation 
covertly taped by police. "Because if you get large numbers here, the 
government will listen." 

The court was told that Mr Benbrika encouraged his adherents to follow in the 
footsteps of one of the masterminds of the 2002 Bali terrorist attack. He 
allegedly told two of them that when they were captured "they should do like 
Amrozi (bin Nurhasyim) and tell the judge, 'You can kill me, but there will be 
others coming after"'. 

The court heard yesterday that the accused group was making plans for a 
backyard explosives laboratory, had held secret training camps and was found 
with an armoury of weapons and bomb-making manuals. 

And some members of the alleged terror cell were anxious to carry out an 
attack. 

According to the police surveillance, Abdulla Merhi, 21, said he "could wait 
months but not years" to carry out violent jihad.

"You shouldn't kill just one, two or three," Mr Benbrika allegedly responded. 
"Do a big thing." 

"Like Madrid?" Mr Merhi allegedly asked, to which Mr Benbrika was said to have 
replied: "That's it." 

Twelve of the accused - Mr Kent, Mr Merhi, Izzydeen Atik, Ahmed Raad, Bassam 
Raad, Ezzit Raad, Majed Raad, Amer Haddara, Aimen Joud, Fadal Sayadi, Hany Taha 
and Shoue Hammoud - are charged with being members of a terrorist organisation 
which Mr Benbrika is alleged to have directed. 

They face a range of other charges including making funds available to a 
terrorist organisation, providing support to a terrorist organisation, and 
possessing a thing connected with a terrorist act. 

Some of the charges carry a maximum prison term of 25 years. 

Mr Benbrika is also charged with directing the activities of a terrorist 
organisation and recruiting a person to join a terrorist organisation. 

Ezzit Raad discussed the London bombings of last year with Mr Benbrika, the 
court heard, complaining that the death toll was not large enough and that "it 
should have been more". 

Sitting in the high-security Victorian County Court building yesterday, the 
Magistrates Court heard that one member of the group had placed a large order 
for laboratory equipment. 

The equipment was allegedly intended for use in the manufacture of explosives 
using chemicals bought by Sydney terror suspects arrested simultaneously in 
joint counter-terrorism raids last year. 

A bomb-making manual called The Vortex Cookbook, and decrees setting out the 
rules of violent jihad, were allegedly uncovered at suspects' homes during 
police raids before the arrest of the 13 men in November in the combined-agency 
counter-terrorism Operation Pendennis. Religious handbooks found allegedly 
included one entitled The Islamic Ruling with Regard to the Killing of Women, 
Children and the Elderly in a Situation of War, and another called The Virtues 
of Martyrdom in the Path of Allah. 

The organisation was "inspired and influenced by al-Qa'ida and the teachings of 
Osama bin Laden", said prosecutor Mark Dean, opening the case yesterday. 

"The organisation was motivated by a belief that the world Islamic community is 
under attack from non-Islamic forces." 

Firearms including rifles and pistols were found at the homes of some of the 
accused during police raids, the court heard. 

Members of the cell attended a training camp with the Sydney accused at a 
remote location near Louth in far northwestern NSW in March last year, the 
court was told yesterday. 

A team-building operation allegedly took place at a camp near Eden, on the NSW 
south coast, in October 2004, and other training camps were allegedly held at 
Kinglake and Ocean Grove, on Melbourne's northeast and southwest outskirts. 

Members of the Melbourne group allegedly contributed $100 a month each to a 
fund used to finance their terrorism plans. 

Group members were involved in car rebirthing, credit-card fraud and selling 
stolen mobile phones to finance their terror plans, Mr Dean said. 

During a police raid in June last year, $18,355 in cash was found at the home 
of Ahmed Raad, the court heard. 

Only seven of the accused were present yesterday morning, with Mr Kent arriving 
in the afternoon after a "misunderstanding" with guards resulted in him being 
left behind at the maximum-security Barwon prison, near Geelong, a three-hour 
drive from Melbourne. 

And Mr Benbrika refused to attend. His barrister, Ashley Halphin, told the 
court his client had been assaulted during transport to or from a previous 
court hearing. 

The hearing before Chief Magistrate Paul Smith was adjourned and will resume on 
Friday.


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