Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Three British blamed for blasting plan passenger aircraft

Three Britons were declared guilty of forging a plan to commit a series of suicide terrorist attacks on international air routes to North America, using bombs made from liquid explosives.




Because of this plan of Al-Qaeda, which, as they say British investigators, discovered a few days before he was to be implemented in work around the world have introduced strict restrictions on the amount of liquids that passengers are allowed to enter the plane.
The same procedure, four people were freed of guilt, while the eighth suspect in the case is not dismissed, told the Reuters Paper British journalist associations.
The terrorists had intended to destroy the simultaneous action of at least seven planes with 200 passengers on routes between London airport "Heathrow" and the United States and Canada in August 2006 with explosives hidden in drink bottles.
London police chief Paul Stephenson said that the accused intended to commit "mass murder of unimaginable scale", while the senior British police official said that in this action that was carried out in the work, it killed thousands of people in aircraft, or more them, if the bombs were activated near the ground.

According to U.S. officials, the scale of these attacks could be measured with the action performed 11th September 2001, when New York and Washington killed about 3,000 people. Terrorists planned to attack the seven air line terninala 3 at the airport "Heathrow", each of which can accommodate between 241 and 285 passengers.
The plan was unveiled on presretanih telephone conversations between British Muslims, who have indicated and that the attacks could be involved 18 suicide bombers, and that objectives could be oil or gas refineries.

This terrorist plan was made in Pakistan, only a few months before they were indicted in August 2006, arrested. Police believe the driver of the plan was a member of Al Qaeda, Egyptian Abu Obda Al-Masri, linked to bombings in London, 7th July 2005.
The leader of the British group is Abdullah Ahmed Ali (28), while Asad Sarvar (29) collected material for making explosives.
But, Sarvar and Tanvir Hussein (28) were declared last year guilty of forging the terrorist plan, but the judges were not agreed on how they intend to execute.
British police said that these terrorist attacks to avoid a narrow, because the two defendants waited for the new passports, no bombs or explosives, nor purchased plane tickets.
Attention of the police in this case has attracted the fact that one member of this group tried to enter an aircraft components for making bombs.

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