ON THE NET
http://www.internet-haganah.us/harchives/005317.html
03 December 2005
"archive.org: promoting the global jihad"
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ON THE NET...
Note: The following text (minus the graphic) is a quote:
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http://www.internet-haganah.us/harchives/005329.html
07 December 2005
Zawahiri interviewed by al-Sahab
This is reportedly the complete version of something that was first seen in September. Links for download will be found here:
http://www.alferdaws.org/leqa/
The first two links demonstrate yet again how archive.org is becoming a main point of distribution for al-Qaida related propaganda and communications:
http://www.archive.org/download/alsahab4/dr1final.mpg
http://ia300240.us.archive.org/3/items/alsahab4/dr1final.mpg
The alferdaws.org site is based in the USA:
Name: alferdaws.org
Address: 64.27.28.190
Datacenter: Hollywood Interactive, Inc., Los Angeles, CA USA
Host and registrant of the alferdaws.org domain name:
goodydomains.com, Bloomington, IN USA
Posted on 07 December 2005 @ 10:27
Note: The following post is an exact quote:
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http://osint.internet-haganah.com/archives/000052.html
December 07, 2005
Detention upheld as terror suspect called 'a danger': Syrian Hassan Almrei
Stewart Bell, National Post:
TORONTO - An imprisoned Syrian terror suspect who has attracted the support of peace activists lost his bid for freedom yesterday when a judge ruled his release would put Canadians at risk. The Federal Court of Canada judge ruled that Hassan Almrei's long-standing involvement in Islamic extremism and the false documents trade justified his continued detention on national security grounds
Mr. Almrei is one of six alleged foreign terrorist group members fighting deportation from Canada. The Syrian, who came to Canada in 1999 as a refugee claimant, was arrested in Toronto in 2001 after the Canadian Security Intelligence Service alleged he was part of a Sunni extremist network. He initially denied the allegations against him, but later explained he had taken part in paramilitary activities in Afghanistan until 1995. He maintained he is a not a follower of Osama bin Laden or his cause, but the judge disagreed. "I have determined that Mr. Almrei has adopted the Islamic extremist ideology of Osama bin Laden, as that term is defined today, and that he participated in a network in forged documentation," the judge ruled. "His participation in jihad has long been established." Even if Mr. Almrei is not himself violent, he "has the potential to facilitate the movement of others who also harbour such beliefs and ideals and to position them to perpetuate violence on foreign or Canadian soil," wrote the judge. "The threat is substantial and serious."
The Investigative Project notes that the Federal Court of Canada opinion, 2005 FC 1645, can be found at www.fct-cf.gc.ca/bulletins/whatsnew/DES-05-01.pdf (170 pages)
Posted on 07 December 2005 @ 15:25 GMT