Moroccan Suspect Charged in Germany with Links to 911 Hijackers
29/08/2002| IslamWeb
Authorities in Germany have outlined charges against a Moroccan man accused of links with the 11 September terror attacks on the United States. ounir el-Motassadek is accused of belonging to a terrorist organisation and assisting in the murder of more than 3,000 people.
German Federal Prosecutor Kay Nehm said Mr el-Motassadek, who is accused of being part of a Hamburg cell of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda network, is believed to have helped three of the hijack pilots enter the United States.
Mr Nehm said prosecutors had also prepared charges against three other members of the Hamburg group.
The 28-year-old Moroccan, who was arrested in November 2001, is the first person to be charged in Europe in connection with the attacks.
SHARES APARTMENT WITH HIJACKERS
Mr Nehm said Mr el-Motassadek was part of a group which arrived in Hamburg from Arab countries between 1992 and 1997.
He shared an apartment in the city with hijacker Marwan al-Shehhi and the suspected ringleader of the group, Mohamed Atta.
Mr Nehm said the group planned in 1999 to attack targets in America using airplanes.
The federal prosecutor said al-Shehhi told a librarian there was going to be an attack on the World Trade Center.
"There will be thousands of dead. You will all think of me," Mr Nehm quoted him as saying.
TALKS TO ATTA & SIGNS WILL
Mr Nehm said Mr el-Motassadek and other members of the cell flew to Afghanistan to organise the logistical details of the attacks and that the Moroccan received training from al-Qaeda in the city of Kandahar.
The suspects returned to Germany in early 2000, and the hijackers flew to the United States, where they began training at flight schools in Florida.
The federal prosecutor said Mr el-Motassadek helped three of the pilots enter the US and managed a bank account in the United Arab Emirates, which was used to finance the hijacker's flying lessons and living costs.
He said Mr el-Motassadek talked to Mohamad Atta on the telephone two days before 11 September and also signed his will.
GERMAN POLICE LOOKING FOR 3 MORE MEN
Mr Nehm said the Hamburg group became radicalised in 1998 and adopted a philosophy rejecting western consumer culture.
He said the group was motivated by a hatred of the international Jewish community and a belief that it was their duty to convert non-believers to Islam.
In investigating the Hamburg cell, authorities had looked into the activities of other Islamic groups and examined a terrorist network including Italy, Spain, France and Great Britain.
German police are still hunting three other men who they say lived with Atta.
The three had reportedly tried to enter the United States but had been denied visas
PHOTO CAPTION
Mounir el-Motassadek is accused of belonging to a terrorist organisation and assisting in the murder of more than 3,000 peop
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