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More terror arrests in Spain, but still no evidence presented
By Vicky Short
18 October 2004
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On September 15 ten Pakistan nationals were arrested in Barcelona
and are now being held in Madrids Soto del Real prison under
the orders of Judge Ismael Moreno.
The Spanish and international press reported that the ten were
suspected of Islamic terrorism and had been arrested
as part of a major terror swoop, but in reality the
detainees are being held on charges of falsifying documents and
drug possession. It seems that investigations will continue to
establish if they maintain links with any Islamic terrorist
group.
A full week after the arrests, the detainees identity
was unknown. Reports stated that raids on the homes of the ten
had uncovered several videos and books of a religious
character. The press gave major prominence to reports that the
videos related to the activities of Osama Bin Laden, although
a judge ruled that this was not a crime since they can be obtained
in any bookshop. A court spokesman subsequently confirmed that
so far no video had been found that linked those arrested to Al
Qaeda.
The judge has declared that the case may not be sent to the
High Court and it may instead be tried under normal criminal law
at a local court. The Catalan police, Mossos dEsquadra,
who made the arrests, had denied from the beginning that the detainees
constituted a cell of Al Qaeda. The latest arrests were a spin
off from a previous investigation by the Mossos who, on September
1, had dismantled a group reportedly falsifying credit cards,
passports and videos.
That case did go to the High Court as it involved currency
and document falsifications. Twenty-six people, nineteen of whom
were Pakistanis, were arrested on that occasion. It was stated
at that time that some of the documents seized appeared to indicate
connections and links to fundamentalist groups. Yet most of the
26 arrested on that occasion were either released or charged with
petty criminal offences. Still a case is being made that such
criminal activities could be used to finance radical fundamentalist
groups.
There has been a whole spate of arrests and detentions of individuals
and groups of Muslim people of various nationalities in Spain
since the 9/11 terror attacks in New York, and particularly since
the terror bombings of several trains in Madrid on March 11, 2004.
But no one has been brought to trial and little information has
been produced as to why most have been detained, despite accusations
of involvement in some of the worst terrorist outrages in modern
times.
The Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon has spearheaded the campaign
against supposed Al Qaeda terrorists. It had been reported at
the time that the Al Qaeda cell that planned and carried out the
outrage in New York had been based in Spain.
In September 2003 Garzon formally charged 35 men, including
Osama Bin Laden, with involvement in 9/11. Al Jazeera journalist
Tayseer Alouni, who interviewed Osama Bin Laden shortly after
the New York attack, is among the 12 people later charged. Al
Jazeera insists Alouni is innocent and has accused the United
States and Israel of inciting Spain to incriminate him.
An alleged Al Qaeda leader currently imprisoned in the US concentration
camp in Guantanamo Bay apparently denounced Alouni. An FBI communication
sent to Spanish police claims that Alouni was in charge of Al
Qaedas relations with the media. The FBI note did not identify
the source of its charge, but this has not prevented Judge Garzon
from including Alouni in his indictment.
Alouni, 56, a Syrian married to a Spaniard, has rejected the
charges against him. His lawyer, Jose Luis Galan, described the
FBI note as juridical trash. The declarations
of a prisoner, obtained in Guantanamo, a place where the interrogations
are obtained under torture and without the most basic rights,
has no validity, he said.
Those arrested and their lawyers suggest that the Al Qaeda
cell theory was an invention of the Spanish state.
Immediately following the March 11 Madrid bombings that killed
192 people and wounded 1,500 others, the police arrested 11 people
that they claimed were connected to the attacks. These were later
identified as three Moroccans, four Arabs, two Indians, one Algerian
and one Spanish person. Due to undemocratic measures put in place
in the name of the war on terror, they can be held
for up to four years without trial.
Some 55 people in all were subsequently arrested in connection
with the Madrid attack. All but 16 of those detained, plus a minor
currently held in a specialist centre, remain in jail without
charge. Two others suspected in involvement in the Madrid bombings,
Rabei Osman El Sayed Mohamed el Egipcio and Moroccan
Hicham Ahmidam, are in prison in Italy and Morocco respectively
on other indictments.
Also in March, an American lawyer was arrested in connection
with the Madrid bombings. Brandon Mayfield, 37, was released after
two weeks when police discovered that fingerprints found on a
bag near the bombsite containing detonators similar to those used
in the train attacks were those of an Algerian. The US authorities
had previously said the fingerprints belonged to Mayfield.
The investigation into the train bombings took a spectacular
turn on April 3; one day after an unexploded bomb was found on
the high-speed rail track between Madrid and Seville. Police raided
an apartment building in the Leganés suburb of the Spanish
capital. Before they could make any arrests, up to six suspects
inside were blown up in a massive explosion that also killed a
policeman. Among the dead was Serhane ben Abdelmajid Farkhet,
a Tunisian who was the suspected ringleader of the Madrid attacks.
The investigation into those attacks focused on the Moroccan Islamic
Combatant Group (MICG), a group that allegedly had links to Al
Qaeda.
On April 13, Spanish police arrested an Algerian man suspected
of being a financial chief of Osama bin Ladens terrorist
network. The Interior Ministry said that Ahmed Brahim might have
been involved in the financing of the August 1998 US embassy bombings
in Kenya and Tanzania.
In July, Abderramed Hammadi Afandi was detained for collaboration
with a terrorist organisation on the grounds that he had
commented to various people that an attack on Madrid was being
prepared.
High Court Judge, Juan del Olmo, freed Afandi, 32, a Spanish
citizen of Moroccan descent, on September 24. Although no charges
have been made against him, Afandi has to report to the court
once a week, is forbidden to leave the country and has been asked
to surrender his passport.
There has also been the case of Sarjane Ben Abdelmajid El
Tunecino. According to a police report, surveillance of
Abdelmajid began early in 2003 based on information from confidential
sources relating to the existence of a group of an undetermined
number of people of Arab nationality who could constitute what
could be denominated as dormant cells in our country of Islamic
terrorism.
The report claims that this cell had amongst its aims, the
recruitment of new members and the funding Islamic fundamentalist
organisations. The only personal data on the group related to
two brothers of Syrian origin but with Spanish nationality by
marriage. It was through this slight amount of evidence that Abdelmajid
was apparently identified. Abdelmajid died in the Leganes explosion.
The police report continues: To conclude, (we) state
that neither the police investigation nor the telephone observations
at any time were able to establish the character of the criminal
activities of the assumed terrorist group and even less the genesis
of a terrorist attack, even though the police interest not only
in El Tunecino but the rest of the group persisted and in consequence
the police operation never stopped.
Syrian Safwan Sabagh was also arrested on August 20 and released
six days later, after being held incommunicado as a suspect in
the train bombings. He told the press that during his imprisonment
the police threatened him that he would not be released for 30
years. His family only heard of his detention through the media.
Sabagh has said that he can demonstrate that there are many
Muslim citizens imprisoned who are innocent and that from
now on his duty will be to help publicly all the innocent
Muslims accused of belonging to any radical group, through contacting
their families and finding them lawyers.
Sabagh was first arrested in March and again released without
charge. He has said he is sure he will be arrested again. They
will arrest us as soon as they can as we are an easy target,
he said. He also said he is preparing his children to endure
the suffering when they grow up for the mere reason of being Muslims,
even when they have been born here (Spain) and are attending state
schools.
Sabagh has lived in Spain for the last 22 years, and runs a
roast chicken business in Valencia. He told the press that he
had been surprised that his fingerprints had been identified on
a book of verses from the Koran found by the police in the flat
in Leganes where the seven alleged bombers blew themselves up,
seven years after he sent it to Allekema Lamari, thought to be
one of the victims.
The ousted Popular Party (PP) has been hysterical in its attempt
to find any possible connection between the banned Basque separatist
group ETA and Islamic terrorists. The PP is demanding to see documents
in government possession that supposedly refer to relations between
the two and has even accused ETA of being involved in the recent
killing of seven Spanish intelligence agents in Baghdad.
However, after the examination of all the documents released
by the National Intelligence Centre (CNI) and the government,
the Commission of Enquiry into the bombings of March 11 has concluded
that they show no involvement, directly or indirectly, of ETA
in the March 11 outrage.
The PP was kicked out of office after it was revealed that
it had falsely claimed ETA was responsible for the Madrid attacks
so as to win re-election and divert attention from its massively
unpopular support for the Us-led war in Iraq. The Ambassador to
the Vatican and ex-director of the CNI, Jorge Dezcallar, has admitted
that the then PP State Secretary for Communications, Alfredo Timermans,
telephoned him on March 13 asking him to publicly give the lie
to reports being broadcasted by radio Cadena Ser which
said that police investigations were being concentrated 99
percent on the Islamic trail. Dezcallar obliged. He has
also stated that when his organisation produced a report holding
ETA responsible, crucial information relating to the bombing was
deliberately withheld from him.
Dezcallar also insisted that the March bombings were the action
of an Islamic group with no more connection with Al Qaeda than
their ideological coincidence. Bin Laden did not know what
was going to happen on 3/11, he concluded.
The new Socialist Party (PSOE) government has continued what
can only be described as a manhunt for people of Muslim origins,
Spanish and foreigners. Upon election, SP leader Jose Luis Zapatero
declared that he would cooperate with the outgoing government
to ensure the effectiveness of the fight against terrorism
and went out of his way to express full support for, and
faith in our police and state security forces.
He told reporters that his governments goal was to
finish off terrorism and ETA is not going to get a minutes
rest.
Zapatero told PSOE members in the Basque country to remember
that he had co-signed the Pact for Liberties and Against Terrorism
with Aznar, which was drawn up in the wake of the September 11
attacks in the United States.
See Also:
Spanish government discusses
extending scope of Anti-Terror Pact
[24 August 2004]
Spain: Commission of Inquiry
into Madrid bombings allows rightwing to regroup
[11 August 2004]
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