Difference between revisions of "File:Babardocs.pdf"

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{{DocProv
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{{Document
|SourceURL=http://www.investigatingtheterror.com/  
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|source_URL=http://www.investigatingtheterror.com/  
|SourceName=Investigating The Terror
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|source_name=Investigating The Terror
|Author=Tom Secker
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|authors=Tom Secker
|DocType=legal document
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|type=legal document
|DocTypeCollection=Yes
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|collection=Yes
|Subject=Junaid Babar  
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|subjects=Mohammed Junaid Babar, 7-7
|Date=2011
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|publication_date=2011
|Note=A collection of relevant documents with an introduction (below) by Tom Secker
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|description=A collection of over 100 pages of unsealed court documents, with an introduction by [[Tom Secker]]
|ContentsTitle=Mohammed Junaid Babar Document Collection
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|title=Mohammed Junaid Babar Document Collection
 
}}  
 
}}  
This collection of over 100 pages of unsealed court documents and  security service records presents the story of [[Al Qaeda]] supergrass Mohammed Junaid Babar. Babar was born in Pakistan in 1975 but moved to the United States  only two years later. He grew up in Queens, NY, and attended the all-male La Salle military boarding school, graduating in the mid 1990s. He attended St. Johns university but dropped out, and in the year 2000 became involved with the New York chapter of [[Al-Muhajiroun]].
+
This collection of over 100 pages of unsealed court documents and  security service records presents the story of [[Al Qaeda]] supergrass [[Mohammed Junaid Babar]]. Babar was born in Pakistan in 1975 but moved to the United States  only two years later. He grew up in Queens, NY, and attended the all-male La Salle military boarding school, graduating in the mid 1990s. He attended St. Johns university but dropped out, and in the year 2000 became involved with the [[New York]] chapter of [[Al-Muhajiroun]].
Al-Muhajiroun are an international Islamist organisation  originally founded in Pakistan, but with a major presence in the US and the UK. The choice of these three countries, and the ease with  which they set up in them, have led many to suspect that the organisation are  affiliated with the security services. Most notably, the major figures in the  British chapter Abu Hamza, Abu Qatada and Omar Bakri all have reported  connections to the British state security services, with the latter two  admitting to being informants for MI5.
 
On September 11th 2001, Babar was in New York and witnessed the  9/11 terrorist attacks. His mother was a cleaner on the 9th floor of one of the  World Trade Center towers, but she managed to escape. It is at this point that  Babars story stops making sense. Rather than being angry at the terrorists who  had nearly killed his mother, Babar apparently decided to join them. He  travelled to Pakistan, and gave two different televised interviews where he  promised to kill Americans in Afghanistan, and to kill American soldiers in  Pakistan. He made no effort to disguise his identity in these interviews, and  though he claimed to have been paid $500 to make these statements, he later  admitted that this was untrue.
 
He joined up with Al Muhajiroun in Pakistan and for most of 2002  he worked for the Pakistan Software Export Board, an agency of the Pakistan  government. He also became an Al Qaeda facilitator, providing equipment and  money and setting up a terrorism training camp in Malakand, in the Afghan-Pak  border region.
 
This camp was apparently used by several people from Britain, including [[Omar Khyam]], [[Salahuddin Amin]], [[Mohammed Siddique Khan]] and [[Mohammed Shakil]]. The former two men were prosecuted and convicted as part of Operation  Crevice the British security services investigation into what is commonly known  as the fertiliser bomb plot. Mohammed Siddique Khan was the alleged ringleader  of the 7/7 bombings, and Shakil was one of three men prosecuted but not  convicted of involvement in the 7/7 conspiracy. Also during this period Babar  flew in and out of Britain on several occasions, apparently without any  difficulties.
 
Babar flew back to the US in early 2004 and not long afterwards he  gave himself up to the FBI. Shortly after Babars return to America, eight men  were arrested in Britain and Canada and charged with being involved in the  fertiliser bomb plot. Ultimately, five men would be convicted in the UK and one  in Canada. Two were exonerated.
 
Babar co-operated with the United States authorities and appeared  as the prosecutions star witness at both of the Crevice trials, one in the UK  and one in Canada. His appearance at the Old Bailey in London took place under  heavy protection by the state, with traffic being halted to allow the armed  motorcade to deliver him to the courthouse. Nonetheless, there is absolutely no  evidence of anyone within Al Qaeda or Al Muhajiroun trying to take revenge  against Babar.
 
Babar also testified in the two trials of Mohammed Shakil, Sadeer  Saleem and Waheed Ali, accused of carrying out hostile reconnaissance in support  of the 7/7 bombing plot. The men were ultimately found innocent, though two were  convicted of planning to attend a terrorism training camp. Collectively, those  who Babar testified against received sentences of over 100 years in prison.  Babar himself, who pleaded guilty to several charges of involvement in  terrorism, spent less than five years behind bars.
 
The big question is also the relatively obvious one was Babar a  double agent, working for the security services all along? He was educated at a  military academy, was involved with an organisation known to have ties to  intelligence agencies, and was mysteriously able to travel all over the world  for over two years despite having been publicly interviewed about his  willingness to commit murder. When he was finally brought to ground, he  co-operated instantly and without any resistance. He was ultimately rewarded for  his co-operation with a ridiculously short sentence. The documents in this  collection shed some light on this key issue.
 
  
 +
Al-Muhajiroun are an international Islamist organisation originally founded in Pakistan, but with a major presence in the US and the UK. The choice of these three countries, and the ease with  which they set up in them, have led many to suspect that the organisation are affiliated with the security services. Most notably, the major figures in the  British chapter [[Abu Hamza]], [[Abu Qatada]] and [[Omar Bakri]] all have reported connections to the British state security services, with the latter two  admitting to being informants for MI5.
  
[[Category:Doc]]
+
On [[September 11th 2001]], Babar was in New York and witnessed the 9/11 terrorist attacks. His mother was a cleaner on the 9th floor of one of the  World Trade Center towers, but she managed to escape. It is at this point that Babar's story stops making sense. Rather than being angry at the terrorists who  had nearly killed his mother, Babar apparently decided to join them. He traveled to Pakistan, and gave two different televised interviews where he  promised to kill Americans in Afghanistan, and to kill American soldiers in Pakistan. He made no effort to disguise his identity in these interviews, and  though he claimed to have been paid $500 to make these statements, he later admitted that this was untrue.
[[Category:Terrorism]]
+
 
[[Category:7/7]]
+
He joined up with Al Muhajiroun in Pakistan and for most of 2002 he worked for the Pakistan Software Export Board, an agency of the Pakistan  government. He also became an Al Qaeda facilitator, providing equipment and  money and setting up a terrorism training camp in Malakand, in the Afghan-Pak  border region.
 +
 
 +
This camp was apparently used by several people from Britain, including [[Omar Khyam]], [[Salahuddin Amin]], [[Mohammed Siddique Khan]] and [[Mohammed Shakil]]. The former two men were prosecuted and convicted as part of [[Operation Crevice]] the British security services investigation into what is commonly known  as the [[fertiliser bomb plot]]. Mohammed Siddique Khan was the alleged ringleader  of the 7/7 bombings, and Shakil was one of three men prosecuted but not  convicted of involvement in the 7/7 conspiracy. Also during this period Babar  flew in and out of Britain on several occasions, apparently without any  difficulties.
 +
 
 +
Babar flew back to the US in early 2004 and not long afterwards he  gave himself up to the FBI. Shortly after Babar's return to America, eight men  were arrested in Britain and Canada and charged with being involved in the [[fertiliser bomb plot]]. Ultimately, five men would be convicted in the UK and one in Canada. Two were exonerated.
 +
 
 +
Babar co-operated with the United States authorities and appeared  as the prosecutions star witness at both of the Crevice trials, one in the UK  and one in [[Canada]]. His appearance at the Old Bailey in London took place under heavy protection by the state, with traffic being halted to allow the armed motorcade to deliver him to the courthouse. Nonetheless, there is absolutely no  evidence of anyone within Al Qaeda or Al Muhajiroun trying to take revenge against Babar.
 +
 
 +
Babar also testified in the two trials of [[Mohammed Shakil]], [[Sadeer Saleem]] and [[Waheed Ali]], accused of carrying out hostile reconnaissance in support  of the 7/7 bombing plot. The men were ultimately found innocent, though two were convicted of planning to attend a terrorism training camp. Collectively, those  who Babar testified against received sentences of over 100 years in prison. Babar himself, who pleaded guilty to several charges of involvement in  terrorism, spent less than five years behind bars.
 +
 
 +
The big question is also the relatively obvious one: ''was Babar a [[double agent]], working for the security services all along?'' He was educated at a  military academy, was involved with an organisation known to have ties to  intelligence agencies, and was mysteriously able to travel all over the world  for over two years despite having been publicly interviewed about his  willingness to commit murder. When he was finally brought to ground, he  co-operated instantly and without any resistance. He was ultimately rewarded for  his co-operation with a ridiculously short sentence. The documents in this  collection shed some light on this key issue.

Latest revision as of 18:56, 23 October 2016

A collection of over 100 pages of unsealed court documents, with an introduction by Tom Secker

Disclaimer (#3)Document.png collection of legal documents  by Tom Secker dated 2011
Subjects: Mohammed Junaid Babar, 7-7
Source: Investigating The Terror (Link)

★ Start a Discussion about this document
Mohammed Junaid Babar Document Collection



This collection of over 100 pages of unsealed court documents and security service records presents the story of Al Qaeda supergrass Mohammed Junaid Babar. Babar was born in Pakistan in 1975 but moved to the United States only two years later. He grew up in Queens, NY, and attended the all-male La Salle military boarding school, graduating in the mid 1990s. He attended St. Johns university but dropped out, and in the year 2000 became involved with the New York chapter of Al-Muhajiroun.

Al-Muhajiroun are an international Islamist organisation originally founded in Pakistan, but with a major presence in the US and the UK. The choice of these three countries, and the ease with which they set up in them, have led many to suspect that the organisation are affiliated with the security services. Most notably, the major figures in the British chapter Abu Hamza, Abu Qatada and Omar Bakri all have reported connections to the British state security services, with the latter two admitting to being informants for MI5.

On September 11th 2001, Babar was in New York and witnessed the 9/11 terrorist attacks. His mother was a cleaner on the 9th floor of one of the World Trade Center towers, but she managed to escape. It is at this point that Babar's story stops making sense. Rather than being angry at the terrorists who had nearly killed his mother, Babar apparently decided to join them. He traveled to Pakistan, and gave two different televised interviews where he promised to kill Americans in Afghanistan, and to kill American soldiers in Pakistan. He made no effort to disguise his identity in these interviews, and though he claimed to have been paid $500 to make these statements, he later admitted that this was untrue.

He joined up with Al Muhajiroun in Pakistan and for most of 2002 he worked for the Pakistan Software Export Board, an agency of the Pakistan government. He also became an Al Qaeda facilitator, providing equipment and money and setting up a terrorism training camp in Malakand, in the Afghan-Pak border region.

This camp was apparently used by several people from Britain, including Omar Khyam, Salahuddin Amin, Mohammed Siddique Khan and Mohammed Shakil. The former two men were prosecuted and convicted as part of Operation Crevice the British security services investigation into what is commonly known as the fertiliser bomb plot. Mohammed Siddique Khan was the alleged ringleader of the 7/7 bombings, and Shakil was one of three men prosecuted but not convicted of involvement in the 7/7 conspiracy. Also during this period Babar flew in and out of Britain on several occasions, apparently without any difficulties.

Babar flew back to the US in early 2004 and not long afterwards he gave himself up to the FBI. Shortly after Babar's return to America, eight men were arrested in Britain and Canada and charged with being involved in the fertiliser bomb plot. Ultimately, five men would be convicted in the UK and one in Canada. Two were exonerated.

Babar co-operated with the United States authorities and appeared as the prosecutions star witness at both of the Crevice trials, one in the UK and one in Canada. His appearance at the Old Bailey in London took place under heavy protection by the state, with traffic being halted to allow the armed motorcade to deliver him to the courthouse. Nonetheless, there is absolutely no evidence of anyone within Al Qaeda or Al Muhajiroun trying to take revenge against Babar.

Babar also testified in the two trials of Mohammed Shakil, Sadeer Saleem and Waheed Ali, accused of carrying out hostile reconnaissance in support of the 7/7 bombing plot. The men were ultimately found innocent, though two were convicted of planning to attend a terrorism training camp. Collectively, those who Babar testified against received sentences of over 100 years in prison. Babar himself, who pleaded guilty to several charges of involvement in terrorism, spent less than five years behind bars.

The big question is also the relatively obvious one: was Babar a double agent, working for the security services all along? He was educated at a military academy, was involved with an organisation known to have ties to intelligence agencies, and was mysteriously able to travel all over the world for over two years despite having been publicly interviewed about his willingness to commit murder. When he was finally brought to ground, he co-operated instantly and without any resistance. He was ultimately rewarded for his co-operation with a ridiculously short sentence. The documents in this collection shed some light on this key issue.

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current17:13, 3 July 2012 (22.02 MB)Peter (talk | contribs)Reverted to version as of 13:04, 7 May 2012
17:13, 3 July 2012 (22.02 MB)Peter (talk | contribs)Category:Doc Category:7/7
13:04, 7 May 2012 (22.02 MB)Peter (talk | contribs)Category:Doc Category:Terrorism Category:7/7
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