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Suspects Confess To Terror Links, Says Yemen

ISSUE 252
Front Page
Index
Headlines

U.N. Briefed On Somalia Arms Trading

Somalis Unite With Horn Of Africa Partners To Address HIV/AIDS

International Thievery

Khat-Fight In Somalia Questions Islamist Position

U.S. Planes Carry Emergency Supplies to Ethiopian Flood Victims

Militant networks

UN envoy to visit Somalia to discuss peace efforts with president

Regional Affairs

Tents To The Rescue Of Somali Children

Suspects Confess To Terror Links, Says Yemen

Editorial
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International News

Al-Jazeera Takes On The World--In English

Thoughts form London

Annan Refutes Notion Of 'Clash Of Civilizations,' Points To Youth As Key To End Mistrust

'Thanks, Have A Camel,' Somali University Says

Five Genocide Fugitives Arrested in UK

The Continued Misunderstanding of the Salafi Jihad Threat (WP)

Why Sudan rejects UN troops

The Shame of the Nation: A Collective Perversion

Experts Agree Somalia Getting Help From Other Nations

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somalia In Mid-November: Sparring And Waiting For Someone To Strike

An Official Visit Of The Speaker And Deputy Speaker Of Somaliland Parliament To Wales

Only A Spirit Of Give And Take Will Work

EDITORIALS: Policy On Somalia Baffling

A Moroccan Snub

'Al-Qaida' hits back in Yemen

Miraa Trade Grinds To A Halt As Flight Ban Holds

$ Billions Set Ablaze In The DR

Food for thought

Opinions

Djibouti’s Dangerous Games

Who Can Replace Sillanyo As The Presidential Ticket For KULMIYE Party

Gun-Trotting Mullahs

Somaliland Public Showed Good Sense And Fidelity To Principle

Mr. Hariir Bulaale’s Comments Against The Minster Of Information

Harbi Trading Company Fuel


Sana’a, Yemen, November 15, 2006 – Seven suspects, including two Australian sons of a Jemaah Islamiah leader, have confessed to involvement in smuggling weapons to Somalia and collecting money for terrorist attacks, Yemeni officials say.

The group includes Sydney men Abdullah Ayub, 19, Mohammed Ayub, 21, and Marek Samulski, 35.

The Ayub brothers are sons of JI leader Abdul Rahim Ayub, who fled Australia after the Bali bombings. Investigators have linked them to a member of an alleged Sydney terrorist cell who was arrested and charged a year ago.

The men, along with a Briton, a Dane, a Somali and another suspect, allegedly acknowledged during interrogation that they were involved in smuggling weapons to Somalia and collecting money to fund terror attacks, a security official said. He said the suspects also confessed to having connections with Yemenis linked to the al-Qaeda terror network.

The Ayub brothers' Sydney lawyer, Adam Houda, said his clients had not confessed.

"I don't know what they're going to be charged with or if they're going to be charged at all," he said last night. "I don't know anything yet, I have to find out. I'm waiting for a call."

Mr. Houda has previously described allegations that the brothers were involved in smuggling arms or linked to al-Qaeda as ridiculous.

The seven men are expected to stand trial in Yemen, Interior Minister Rashad al-Alimi said on Monday.

Other officials said a search of the Dane's house found documents and reports linked to al-Qaeda and thousands of US dollars and euros.

The arrests are part of a state security campaign launched last month against members of an al-Qaeda cell. The security official said among more than 12 suspected militants arrested in the campaign, six were believed to be linked to the Sanaa cell.

One of the detainees allegedly confessed that he was assigned to carry out an attack with an explosive-laden car on Sanaa international airport, the security official said.

Source: AP


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