Monday, April 30th, 2012

Our parents did it for civil rights &ndash it’s time for us to do our part to speak out

October 22, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

Our parents did it for civil rights – it’s time for us to do our part, to speak out against it.”. A small end-of-terrace house doubling as a mosque in Leicester was at the centre of Britain’s anti-terror campaign when it emerged that many of the men arrested this week as part of the investigation worshipped there. Muslims attending the mosque for lunchtime prayers declared themselves surprised and upset at the prospect of alleged al-Qa’ida members in their midst.The Taqwa mosque, which was established about six years ago, is a two-up, three-down red-brick townhouse built in 1901. There is no sign on the door and no indication from the outside that it is a place of worship.

Some had arrived recently and others had been here about two years.”If they have done something wrong, then it is right that they should be punished But there is some upset over the new terrorism laws. It seems as if they are being regarded as guilty until proven innocent.”No one at either of the Salafia mosques admitted to knowing the identities of those arrested – nine on Thursday and eight yesterday, including nine on terrorism offences – but they said they were of north African and Arabic extraction rather than indigenous Asian It is understood that a number are French-speaking Algerian. On Thursday, two Algerians who were arrested in September, Brahim Benmerzouga, 30, and Baghdad Meziane, 36, were charged with a total of 14 offences relating to directing and and raising funds for al-Qa’ida.A third French-Algerian, businessman Djamal Beghal, arrested in Dubai on suspicion of being Osama bin Laden’s head of European recruitment, is understood to have told interrogators that he had recruited men from the Taqwa mosque to fight for al-Qa’ida, but that was denied.Idrif Yaraich, uncle of the mosque’s 18-year-old imam, named only as Suleyman, said: “That really is a load of rubbish … We don’t know the identities of these people because we don’t know the names of those arrested, but we think about six of them came here …

There was no recruitment.”Around the Highfields, Northfields and St Matthews areas of the city, there was evidence of the police operation. Broken doors were being guarded by officers in at least eight streets. Next door to one address raided in Guilford Street, a young mother, who asked not to be named, said: “It’s very scary to know that someone like that could be living next door to you.”Manzoor Moghal, chairman of the Federation of Muslim Organisations in Leicestershire, said he was afraid the British National Party and National Front might try to capitalise on the arrests. “There has traditionally been very good race relations here and we are working hard with the police to keep it that way,” he said.It was unclear last night whether the arrests had come to an end, but forensic scientists were still examining the raided premises for evidence.At a house in Severn Street, where two policemen stood guard outside the front door and an officer was dusting a first-floor window for fingerprints, one of the residents suddenly leaned out of a window to speak to reporters. Wearing a black and white dressing gown and appearing relaxed, he refused to say what his home was being searched for “I’m just helping them,” he said. “They’re asking me questions and I’m making them cups of tea.” Then, with the police officers laughing, he slammed the window shut.. Just weeks after crowing victory over Osama bin Laden’s al-Qa’ida forces in Afghanistan, the Bush administration is now singing a very different tune.

The tapes, each an hour-long speech to camera by an al-Qa’ida member, were described by the Attorney General, John Ashcroft, as “martyrdom messages from suicide terrorists”.Four of the five men were previously unknown to the US authorities, including one who remains unnamed. The fifth, however, was not only known but was also deeply implicated in the 11 September attacks. Ramsi bin al-Shibh, a 29-year-old Yemeni, lived in Hamburg with Mohamed Atta, the 11 September ringleader, and is believed to have been selected as the “20th hijacker” – the missing fifth man on board United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed in the Pennsylvania countryside after an in-flight assault by the passengers.He tried repeatedly to obtain a visa to enter the United States, but was turned down. According to an indictment handed down in US federal court last month, his place was taken by Zacarias Moussaoui, a Frenchman of Moroccan origin who was arrested in Minnesota in August after raising suspicions at a local flight school and so also failed to participate in the attacks.Mr bin al-Shibh has been wanted in Germany since shortly after 11 September. The video not only supplies the first public glimpse of his face, but it also suggests he went to Afghanistan either immediately before or immediately after the attacks.The videos form part of an increasingly pessimistic tone emanating from Washington.

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