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"Terror suspect convicted" - er, for what?

mini_mouse | 02.03.2005 00:02 | Terror War | London

British terror suspect Saajid Badat has admitted plotting to blow up a plane on its way to the US using a "shoe bomb", according to news reports yesterday.

The court heard he had agreed to be a suicide bomber with the intention of destroying a passenger aircraft while it was in the air en route from Europe to the United States.

And his guilty plea has been hailed as a victory by Deputy Assistant Commissioner Peter Clarke, head of the Anti-Terrorist Branch.

But according to State Prosecutor Richard Horwell, "... he did not take that flight. We accept by then he had withdrawn from the conspiracy which by then he had been party to for an appreciable period of time"

Now nobody would claim this was a totally cool guy, but let's face it, he didn't actually do anything illegal, he thought about it a bit, and then decided against it.

So the person that they have actually managed to convict, because for once they have some evidence ("three years of intensive and painstaking international investigation", according to the head of the Anti-Terrorist branch), hasn't done anything at all.

Meanwhile, thousands of people are locked up, tortured and killed in Bagram, Abu Ghraib, Guantanemo, and around the world by the US, the UK and their axis-of-evil allies. Since they are unable to bring any of these "terrorists" to justice, we must assume, despite the way they are treated, that they are even less guilty than Saajid Badat, convicted today under English law of not being a suicide bomber.


mini_mouse

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

What are you talking about?

02.03.2005 07:54

What are you talking about? He quite clearly pleaded guilty 'to conspiracy to destroy, damage or endanger an aircraft'. No one charged him with actually blowing up an aircraft.

Paul Edwards


How dare

02.03.2005 11:07

This man was and is an Islamic fanatic who was planning to destroy an aircraft and murder hundreds of people so therefore he should have the support of the entire Liberal Left community. What I want to know is how influenced was he by the horrors of American Imperialism who are the real criminals here. Indeed if it wasn't for the (US controlled) film and TV industry this man would probably never have considered becoming a suicide bomber. The more we look at this case the more we realise that the Bush led Neo-cons are responsible and in fact he should receive substanial compensation from the likes of Halliburton.

AG


If he can go to jail for conspiring to blow something up

02.03.2005 11:19

Then how much time should BUsh and Blair spend for actually blowing things up in Iraq Afghanistan etc and conspiring to blow things up in Iran Syria etc?

We catch the small fish who in hte end did nothing wrong only to allow the big fish to remain alive.

?


terrorist or suspect?

02.03.2005 13:53

Has he been convicted yet?

bud_hoover


Re:

02.03.2005 21:00

Conspiracy to commit a crime is against the law, even if you then change your mind.

There's having a little think about a silly dream. And there's being a fully signed up co-conspirator. Sounds like this guy falls into the latter camp.

Don't get me wrong, the state terrorists are worse. But terror is terror. I don't support that kind of murder whoever it is that's planning it.

Ozymandias


A summary of "terrorist" arrests

02.03.2005 23:08

Well, some interesting responses.

This conviction was splashed across the media as an example of the kind of terrorist we're up against. Hardly a week goes by where there's no press hysteria about an Al Qaeda threat (although we're not to understand that this is a war against Islam).

Yet despite the hundreds of arrests, scarcely anyone is ever convicted of what might be described as a crime (I'm sceptical of "conspiracy", it's like being arrested for resisting arrest!).

This site

 http://www.salaam.co.uk/themeofthemonth/september03_index.php?l=48

offers some of the arrests and outcomes over the past few years.

Still, let's put our faith in the government eh? Unless the Lords manage to squash it, we'll never need to worry about trying these terrorists. We'll just lock 'em up and throw away the key.

mini_mouse