- Dec 29, 2008
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Ahmad Wali Siddiqui, a German-Afghani who is alleged to have been a member of al-Qaida, said on both Monday and Tuesday during his trial that Iran harbored al-Qaida terrorists.
The revelations were fresh evidence of Shiite Irans ongoing support of Sunni terrorists in al-Qaida and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.
Life in Germany is not good. You live with gays, lesbians and Jews. Islam rules here, Siddiqui, 37, told his mother in Hamburg in a wiretapped telephone conversation disclosed during his trial. He is charged with being a member of a terrorist organization.
A group of German Islamists planned to return from Pakistan in 2010 to mount attacks targeting Europes economy. American forces in Kabul arrested Siddiqui in 2010 when he was on his way to Germany.
He said during the trial that two of his fellow conspirators Rami Makanesi and Naamen Meziche flew from Vienna to Tehran so as not to not get caught. An Iranian-operated travel agency in Hamburg arranged their trip.
Makanesi and Meziche established contact with a facilitator known as Dr.
Mamoud, who works for the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, Siddiqui continued.
The travel route allowed the two men to travel unimpeded to the eastern Iranian city of Zahedan, which serves a hub for terrorists seeking to enter Afghanistan and Pakistan. Dr. Mamoud welcomed them to Zahedan and from the border city they made their way into Pakistan, Siddiqui said.
Pakistani authorities arrested Makanesi in 2010 while disguised as a woman wearing a burka. Meziche is believed to be in Iran.
German-Afghani terror suspect li... JPost - Iranian Threat - News