UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, September 09, 2008
16:22 Mecca time, 13:22 GMT
 
News Europe
Three guilty of plotting UK blasts

 Tanvir Hussain, left, and Assad Sarwar were arrested in August 2006  [AP]

Three men have been found guilty by a UK court of plotting to commit murder using liquid explosives.

Abdulla Ahmed Ali, Assad Sarwar and Tanvir Hussain were convicted at Woolwich Crown Court in London of conspiring to murder hundreds of people in 2006.

The jury failed to reach verdicts on four other defendants - Ibrahim Savant, Arafat Waheed Khan, Waheed Zaman and Umar Islam.

An eighth man, Mohammed Gulzar, was found not guilty on all counts.

Eight suspects were cleared of planning to smuggle explosives onto six aircraft at London's Heathrow airport and blow them up.

All of the men, whose arrest in August 2006 led to tight restrictions being introduced on carrying liquids on board aircraft around Europe, had denied charges of conspiracy to murder.

Three of the defendants had pleaded guilty to plotting explosions.

Al-Qaeda videos
 
Seven also admitted conspiracy to commit public nuisance by distributing al-Qaeda videos threatening suicide bomb attacks in the UK.

IN VIDEO

UK bomb plotters convicted

Ali and his co-defendants argued that they merely intended to carry out a publicity-style attack to draw attention to their outrage at British and US foreign policy in Iraq and Afghanistan.

They said they never intended to attack aircraft.

The bombs would have been made from liquid explosives based on hydrogen peroxide mixed with an organic component such as tang, a substance used to make soft drinks.
 
The jury reached its verdict after more than 50 hours of deliberation.

Thousands of international flights from London were affected and liquids were banned from aircraft in 2006 after UK police claimed they had uncovered a plot to blow up planes midway across the Atlantic.

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 1
 
Terry
Afghanistan
09/09/2008
Everybody does realize that although it ,the binary liquid bomb, 'was possible' on paper it was so impractical in real life that for all intents and purposes it was impossible to do. Unfortunatly nobody in a position of power asked the local high school chemistry teacher if it could be done in the washroom of a flying aircraft they only asked the political security appointies

 
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