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Darko Trifunovic - Details released in French bomb case

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By ROB GILLIES – Nov 20, 2008

OTTAWA (AP) — French authorities allege an Ottawa university professor bought a motorcycle used in a bombing that killed four people and injured 20 at a Paris synagogue in 1980, according to court documents released Thursday.

Officials also allege Hassan Diab used an alias and a false Cypriot passport in 1980 to enter France. The evidence also includes police sketches of the bombing suspect based on witness descriptions, and old passport photos.

On Oct. 3, 1980, a bomb containing the powerful explosive pentrite hidden in the saddlebags of a parked motorcycle exploded outside the synagogue during a Sabbath service, killing three French men and one Israeli woman. About 200,000 people later marched through the streets of Paris to protest the attack.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-Special Operations was blamed at the time. The investigation was reopened after Diab's name was on a list of former members of a Palestinian extremist group obtained by German intelligence officials.

In the court documents a report from France's intelligence agency that fingers Diab as one of the members of the extremist group also indicated the group was involved in a bombing near a synagogue in Antwerp, Belgium, in 1981. That bombing led police to further investigate Diab and discover that he allegedly used the name Alexander Panadriyu to purchase the Suzuki motorcycle that was involved in the bombing in Paris.

Canadian authorities arrested Diab last week, at the request of French authorities. He appeared at a hearing on Thursday.

Diab's lawyer, Rene Duval, says his client is an innocent victim of mistaken identity and was not in France when the explosion happened.

"The evidence is basically nonexistent. It's not credible," Duval said outside court.

Associated Press writer Amy Luft in Montreal contributed to this story.
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Darko Trifunovic - US seeks Al-Qaeda suspect's extradition from Belgium: official

US seeks Al-Qaeda suspect's extradition from Belgium: official



US seeks Al-Qaeda suspect's extradition from Belgium: official AFP/Belga/File – US authorities are seeking the extradition of Nizar Trabelsi, seen here 2006 in the correctional court …

BRUSSELS (AFP) – US authorities are seeking the extradition of a Tunisian, already convicted in Belgium for planning attacks, over suspected links to the Al-Qaeda network, prosecutors here said Monday.

Nizar Trabelsi has already lodged an appeal to a decision by a Belgian court to approve his extradition, which means a final decision is unlikely for some time.

"The Americans think that Nizar Trabelsi is an active Al-Qaeda member who was developing activities beyond those he was convicted of in Belgium," Lieve Pellens, the spokeswoman for the federal prosecutors, told a news conference.

Trabelsi was arrested two days after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks in Washington and New York.

He was sentenced in June 2004 to 10 years in jail for plotting to drive a car bomb into Kleine Brogel, a NATO airbase in northern Belgium where American military personnel work.

Trabelsi, who spent time in Al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan, was also suspected of planning an attack against the US embassy in Paris, although the charges were not pursued during his trial.

He openly pledged his allegiance to the al-Qaeda's leader Osama Bin Laden during the trial.

Pellens said that a grand jury in Washington DC had indicted him on November 16, 2007 for belonging to a criminal organisation with intent to murder US citizens abroad, a crime which carries a life sentence.

He is also accused in the United States of having tried to use weapons of mass destruction as well as having provided material and financial support to a foreign terrorist organisation.

A court in the central Belgian city of Nivelles, where Trabelsi is being held, had "for the most part" approved the extradition request on condition that he not be rejudged for acts committed in Belgium, said Pellens.

Trabelsi's appeal the decision would be heard in Brussels in "two to three weeks" and could go all the way to the country's top court, she said.

After the courts decide on the legality of Trabelsi's extradition, it is up to Justice Minister Jo Vandeurzen to take the political decision as to whether or not to go ahead.

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Darko Trifunovic - Britain, Algeria Discuss Anti-Terrorism Fight

Britain, Algeria Discuss Anti-Terrorism Fight

Source: AFP, 25 Nov 08

 

UK Minister Rammell vows to support Algerian CT efforts.

Foreign Office Minister Bill Rammell vowed Tuesday to help Algeria in the fight against "terrorism" after talks with Algerian officials here. "Both of our countries have been victims of terrorism, against which Algeria has deployed major efforts, and we are ready to help them in those efforts," said Foreign Office minister Bill Rammell. He cited exchanging information and

experience in fighting terrorism and the networks that finance it, as well as sharing advanced policing methods. Al-Qaeda's North African branch has claimed responsibility for a number of major attacks in Algeria this year. In 2005 in London, 56 people were killed, including four bombers who detonated home-made devices on three underground trains and a bus. Besides terrorism, Rammell said Britain and Algeria would soon sign economic agreements on investments and non-double taxation. British energy giant BP is heavily present in Algeria, and British investments in the country amount to some 50 billion dollars. "We are the biggest investor in the country," Rammell said, adding that relations between the two countries have been solid. Rammell held talks with Algerian Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci, among other officials.

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