Untitled Document
The claim of responsibility for the London attacks was first posted on one of
the dozens of Islamic websites that are routinely monitored by western intelligence
services.
The statement, under the name of the Secret Organisation of the al-Qaida Jihad
in Europe, said: "The heroic mujahideen have carried out a blessed raid
in London. Britain is now burning with fear, terror and panic in its northern,
southern, eastern and western quarters."
It was posted on an Arabic website, al-qal3ah.com, which is registered by Qalaah
Qalaah in Abu Dhabi and hosted by a server in Houston, Texas.
But two Israeli groups devoted to exposing the network of jihadist sites claim
that it is connected to the London-based Saudi dissident Saad al-Faqih. Mr Faqih,
who is based in Willesden, north-west London, and runs the Movement for Islamic
Reform in Arabia (Mira), was designated by the US treasury last December as
a supporter of al-Qaida. The UK Treasury followed suit by freezing Mr Faqih's
assets.
Speaking in December 2004 before the assets were frozen, Mr Faqih ridiculed
any idea that "millions of dollars" would be frozen. "I have
no assets in the US and all I have in the UK is a current account with a few
hundred pounds."
The US claimed that Mr Faqih was an associate of Khaled al-Fawwaz, who was
arrested in Britain on a US extradition warrant for his alleged involvement
in the 1998 east African embassy bombings.
The US said that "extremists utilise a website controlled by al-Faqih
and Mira on messageboards to post al-Qaida-related statements and images. While
Mira has issued disclaimers warning users to not attribute postings on Mira
message boards to al-Qaida, information available to the US and UK governments
shows that the messages are intended to provide ideological and financial support
to al-Qaida affiliated networks and potential recruits."
Mr Faqih has always vigorously denied being involved with terrorism. Yesterday
he was indignant about being linked to the website.
"It does not belong to me at all," he told the Guardian. "It
is a Zionist smear."
He had seen the message on Thursday morning and doubted its authenticity. "It
was only there for a few minutes, and they misquoted the Qur'an." He also
said the website - or more accurately a bulletin board - could be used by anyone.
The server in Houston has intriguing connections. Everyone's Internet was founded
by brothers Robert and Roy Marsh in 1998 and by 2002 had an income of more than
$30m (now about £17m).
Renowned for his charitable work, Roy Marsh counts among his friends President
George Bush's former sister-in-law, Sharon Bush, and the president's navy secretary.
Everyone's Internet, which also hosts a number of pornographic sites, states:
"We support the uncensored flow of information and ideas over the internet
and do not actively monitor subscriber activity under normal circumstances."
However, the company has responded to requests to take down objectionable material
and insists it cooperates with US law enforcement agencies.
Go to Original Article >>>
The views expressed herein are the writers' own and do not necessarily reflect those of Looking Glass News. Click the disclaimer link below for more information.
Email: editor@lookingglassnews.org.
|