LONDON, April 30, 2007

5 Get Life In Prison For U.K. Bomb Plot

Five Al Qaeda-Linked Men Accused Of Plotting London Bombing Spree

  • Play CBS Video Video U.K. Convicts Terror Suspects

    A massive domestic surveillance operation in Britain led to the conviction of five suspects, all born in England, for conspiring to commit acts of terrorism. Sheila MacVicar reports.

  • Video U.K.: Five Guilty Of Bomb Plot

    Britain's longest terrorism trial ended when a jury found five men guilty of plotting to bomb several targets in London. As Charlie D'Agata reports, they planned to use a giant fertilizer bomb.

  • The five British men found guilty in a conspiracy to bomb a London nightclub, top row, from left to right: Waheed Mahmood, Omar Khyam, Alahuddin Amin. Bottom row: Anthony Garcia, left, and Jawad Akbar

    The five British men found guilty in a conspiracy to bomb a London nightclub, top row, from left to right: Waheed Mahmood, Omar Khyam, Alahuddin Amin. Bottom row: Anthony Garcia, left, and Jawad Akbar  (AP / file)

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(CBS/AP)  Five al Qaeda-linked men were sentenced to life in prison Monday for plotting to bomb a nightclub, power plants and an Iraq contractor in London — a plan that exposed links between their terror cell and the suicide bombers who attacked London's transit system in 2005.

The five, all British citizens, were convicted Monday of plotting to attack the London targets with bombs made from a half-ton stockpile of fertilizer after a yearlong trial in which prosecutors and an FBI informant claimed the group was linked to al Qaeda leaders. It was Britain's longest terror case.

It was also the country's most intensive surveillance operation ever, reports CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar. Investigators bugged more than 90 phone lines, sifted through 27,000 hours of video and audio intercepts and logged more than 33,000 hours watching the conspirators.

Surveillance teams tracking the five men stumbled onto the transit attackers over a year before they killed 52 commuters on July 7, 2005, but officials failed to piece together intelligence in time to halt the blasts.

Though agents slipped a tracking device on transit bombing ringleader Mohammed Siddique Khan's car and heard him pledge to carry out violence against non-Muslims during bugged conversations, Britain's MI5 spy agency halted surveillance — deciding he was not a priority.

Details of ties between the plotters and the subway bombers were kept secret from the jury to ensure a fair trial. The links were revealed in closed sessions and confirmed Monday by government officials and police.

Security officers claim Khan, accomplice Shehzad Tanweer and the mastermind of the fertilizer bomb plot, Omar Khyam, trained together at camps in Pakistan and met Abdul al-Hadi al-Iraqi, an al Qaeda operative now held at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay.

The revelations are at odds with statements by Britain's government after the 2005 attack, when senior ministers — who a month earlier had lowered the country's alert status — said the strike was unexpected and the perpetrators unknown.

Jurors deliberated for almost a month over the plot to detonate bombs made from 1,300 pounds of fertilizer stockpiled in a London storage unit.

Khyam, 25, Anthony Garcia, 25, Jawad Akbar, 23, Waheed Mahmood, 35, and Salahuddin Amin, 32, were sentenced to life in prison for conspiring to cause explosions.

Garcia, Khyam and Waheed Mahmood will be eligible for parole after 20 years, and Amin and Akbar, after 17½ years — but all five were warned they could face spending the rest of their lives in jail.

Two others, Nabeel Hussain and Shujah Mahmood, were cleared of conspiracy to cause explosions. All seven are British citizens — six with family ties to Pakistan.

Khyam, who led the fertilizer bomb plotters to militia camps in Pakistan, was steeped in radicalism. At age 16, he dropped out of school and went to Kashmir and later visited Afghanistan to meet members of the Taliban.

Khan, Tanweer, and American radical-turned-FBI informant Mohammed Junaid Babar joined his 2003 camps, prosecutors said.

In Britain, conversations on 100 bugged phone lines and at two houses were taped, capturing Khan and Khyam discussing terrorism and the fertilizer bomb plotters debating possible targets, including central London's Ministry of Sound nightclub, with a capacity for 1,800 revelers.

Tapes revealed Mahmood and Khyam proposed attacks on a British construction firm, Amec, which has contracts in Iraq and helped clean up after the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Mahmood, who worked for a utility supplier, suggested an attack against British electricity, water and gas power supplies.

In testimony, Babar, a naturalized American from Pakistan, said al-Iraqi had urged Khyam's group to carry out attacks in Britain.

"I have no doubt that they are clearly linked to the heart of al Qaeda," said Peter Clarke, Britain's police counterterrorism chief.

Some 700 police halted the plot in dawn raids in March 2004. Final targets had not been selected, but plans were dangerously close to execution, prosecutors said.

Khan was monitored alongside the fertilizer bomb plotters and details of his activities were reported by informants who knew him only by aliases. But he was never ranked as a major threat.

A government security official, who briefed reporters on the case in exchange for anonymity, said 15 other terror suspects were ranked as higher priorities than Khan and Tanweer.

But only one of those suspects was later jailed: Kazi Rahman — a man officials believe was trying to buy a missile launchers to target passenger jets. He pleaded guilty to possessing weapons for the purpose of terrorism.

Stretched by a growing number of suspected plots, MI5 never pieced together the intelligence on Khan. "There needs to be that killer fact and it just wasn't there," the official said.

Babar told U.S. authorities that Khan — whom he recognized from a blurred surveillance photograph — had sought meetings with al Qaeda leaders and warned he "should be checked out." But he didn't know Khan's real name and the tip was too vague to prompt action, the official said.

Intelligence on Khan and his cell was pieced together only months after their bloody attack, the official said — when their identities and aliases were established.

Prime Minister Tony Blair has ordered a panel of lawmakers to review an inquiry into the London bombings, which absolved counterterrorism officials of any blame last year.

But the government has ruled out demands from survivors and opposition lawmakers for a public inquiry based on the U.S. Commission into the Sept. 11 attacks.

"The security service will never have the capacity to investigate everyone who appears on the periphery of every operation," MI5 chief Jonathan Evans said, adding his agents would always regret failing to halt the London bombings.



© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 31 Comments
by jankebenz May 1, 2007 6:07 PM EDT
life sentances for killing 52 inocent people? what a joke. Instead of wasting millions of tax payers dollars to incarcerate them, I say have a public hanging. Save millions and make a good example for other muslem sickos.
Reply to this comment
by zoltaric May 1, 2007 12:32 PM EDT
These men are innocent scapegoats in Bush and Blairs war against Islam.

Demand freedom for these warriors of Allah.

God bless them that someday the truth is revealed and they can enjoy freedom someday.

Recognize the true enemies of freedom. the only thing they are guilty of is having a mid-eastern appearance.

Very sad day's thee are.
Reply to this comment
by extremophil May 1, 2007 12:03 PM EDT
Prison life in England. What a severe punishment.
Reply to this comment
by stezzer May 1, 2007 7:01 AM EDT
DRinUK

You are a prize one pillock, and you had the cheek to tell me to vote BNP on a previous posting.

You're a joke, get back to the BBC.
Reply to this comment
by j-whitman May 1, 2007 1:43 AM EDT
Good job UK & you did it without GITMO & waterbording...
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 May 1, 2007 1:25 AM EDT
All religions must be banned.
Posted by tomflint69 at 06:44 PM : Apr 30, 2007


Don't worry. That has been foretold and will happen.
Reply to this comment
by aldesousa May 1, 2007 12:51 AM EDT
The dogs of Islam have been unleashed, these are a new breed, a cross between hate and ignorance. They are the scavengers of souls.
They will never appreciatte freedom because they thrive in death.
Sometimes I do feel sorry of these pawns in a big game of chess, but I feel more sorrow for the innocent lifes they take without warning or reason.
They should be bobamberd with books and not bombs.
Reply to this comment
by bellal-2009 May 1, 2007 12:26 AM EDT
No, but scrutinizing ALL Muslims might be a good idea. Since it's exclusively radical Muslims who want to carry out attacks.
Reply to this comment
by hodek77 May 1, 2007 12:17 AM EDT
These convicted men are the reason why Her Majesty's government must deport all the darkies.
Reply to this comment
by bellal-2009 April 30, 2007 11:18 PM EDT
They don't look like British men to me. They look like Middle Eastern men who went to Britain, took advantage of liberal immigration policy with the intent to carry out Al-queda attacks. These aren't BRITISH men. They are TERRORISTS, Middle Eastern TERRORISTS. Hang them from the highest tree. Brits, take back your country!
Reply to this comment
by lestb35 April 30, 2007 10:51 PM EDT
Five al Qaeda-linked men were sentenced to life in prison Monday for plotting to bomb a nightclub, power plants and an Iraq contractor in London %u2014


Boy oh boy, do they need a death penalty.
Reply to this comment
by tomflint69 April 30, 2007 9:59 PM EDT
heee heehe heee.... Sevenveils! give me your home address and I will send you apples (fresh apples from my farm lands in England)
Reply to this comment
by sevenveils April 30, 2007 9:48 PM EDT
O my goodness, Is that the face of feelfree1 in that group?
Reply to this comment
by tomflint69 April 30, 2007 9:47 PM EDT
Sorry, now I understand that you wana make your Islamic website popular. You want people to visit the web link you posted in your message. Nice way of bringing web trafic! I will also try it for my website :-)
Reply to this comment
by tomflint69 April 30, 2007 9:44 PM EDT
lars008! dont try to show us your knowledge of Islamic wars and Islamic things you even dont know. more then 1/2 of your knowledge is based on false facts.
I am sure you dont know even the abcd of Christianity (or your religion). You just wasted
space.
All religions must be banned.


Reply to this comment
by rheola-2009 April 30, 2007 7:49 PM EDT


All due credit must go to the British security forces in this matter.
To all appearances, they just got on with an excellent operation, and followed it through to the finish, and as it appears, without political interference, common in other countries.

They can only be congratulated, in potentially saving so many lives.

Reply to this comment
by brit-ifidel April 30, 2007 7:00 PM EDT
No point trying say anything intelligent now.
Never mind! I'm good at drawing pictures!!!
Reply to this comment
by brit-ifidel April 30, 2007 6:53 PM EDT
LOL *** u r right!
I've lost all my credibility on my first posting!
Reply to this comment
by gwagener April 30, 2007 6:53 PM EDT
I hit Publish too quick:
BRIT-IFIDEL,
"Their" is the posessive form of "they."
"There're" is the contraction for "there are."
"They're is the contraction for "they are."
Reply to this comment
by gwagener April 30, 2007 6:40 PM EDT
BRIT-IFIDEL,
"Their" is the posessive form of "they."
"There're" is the contraction for "there are."
Reply to this comment
See all 31 Comments

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