- BERLIN (Reuters) - One of
the kamikaze hijackers who destroyed the World Trade Center apparently
boasted more than a year before the September 11 attack that his actions
would kill thousands, Germany's public prosecutor said on Thursday.
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- Prosecutor General Kay Nehm gave details of the warning
after charging an alleged conspirator, Mounir El Motassadeq, with serving
as a terrorist accomplice in the murder of more than 3,000 people in the
New York attack.
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- Nehm told how hijacker Marwan Al Shehhi, who piloted
the second plane into the World Trade Center, told a Hamburg librarian
in April or May 2000: "There will be thousands of dead, you will think
of me."
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- "In addition the words 'World Trade Center' were
mentioned," Nehm said.
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- Shehhi's warning in the port city of Hamburg appears
to be a rare breach of security for an extraordinarily secretive group.
Those who knew the hijackers there have described them as polite, hard-working
students who gave no clues that they would commit the world's deadliest
peacetime attack.
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- The prosecutor told reporters Motassadeq and Shehhi were
part of a group of seven radical Islamists who came together in the 1990s
in Hamburg. Of those, only Motassadeq, 28, a former electrical engineering
student, has been charged. Three were pilots killed in the attacks and
the others are still at large.
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- "The charges are suspicion of membership in a terrorist
group and aiding and abetting murder in more than 3,000 cases," Nehm
said. "He is accused of being a member of the Hamburg cell that supported
the four terror attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001."
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- Motassadeq was arrested in Hamburg in late November.
It is the first time he has been formally charged. "Motassadeq was
a cog without which the thing would not have worked," Nehm said.
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- The leader of the Hamburg cell was former urban planning
student Mohammed Atta, who piloted the first plane into the World Trade
Center. Shehhi, who piloted the second, and a third pilot Ziad Jarrah had
also studied in Hamburg, which has many residents hailing from the Middle
East.
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- "The militant rejection of Western society and its
values and the defense of the Muslim world against non-Muslims, including
through terrorist acts, was the basis of the group's activities,"
he added.
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- The other three members of the group were Atta's roommates
whom police are still looking for. They are German Said Bahaji, Yemeni
Ramzi Binalshibh, who tried to enter the United States and is thought to
have wanted to take part in the hijackings, and Moroccan Zakariya Essabar,
who was also denied visas to join Atta, Shehhi and Jarrah in the United
States.
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- AGENT OF THE ATTACKERS
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- Motassadeq lived just around the corner from Atta and
his "house of supporters." He met Atta some time in 1995 or 1996
and served as a witness to Atta's 1996 will. Nahm said their terror cell
was formed by at least the summer of 1999.
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- "By October 1999 at the latest, the members of the
group under Atta's leadership had decided to participate in a jihad through
a terrorist attack on America and kill as many people as possible,"
the prosecutor said.
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- The next step was training in Afghanistan ( at al Qaeda
camps. Motassadeq was in Afghanistan from May to August 2000, a few months
after Atta and three others, Nehm said.
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- "In addition to ideological and militant schooling
the stay enabled them to agree with the international network on the details
of the attack and on logistical support," Nehm said.
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- After Atta and others had traveled to the United States
to start pilot training, Motassadeq remained in Hamburg to provide logistical
support as an "agent" for the group, Nehm said.
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- Authorities say Motassadeq managed pilot Shehhi's Hamburg
bank account, which was used to cover costs related to his U.S. residence
permit and flight training. Nehm said Motassadeq also provided financial
assistance to other members already in the United States in the final stages
of their planning.
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- Motassadeq's wife, who still lives down the street from
the now vacant Atta apartment, declined to comment when contacted by telephone
on Thursday. Nehm said because of the role of women in Islam, she may not
have known about her husband's activities.
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- In October, Motassadeq told Reuters he knew fellow students
Atta and Shehhi but only casually.
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