2011年6月30日星期四

Yahoo! News: Terrorism

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Terrorism


Suspects on trial over Morocco cafe bombing (AP)

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 09:46 AM PDT

Polices officers and lawyers stand in the entrance of the courthouse in Sale, Morocco Thursday, June, 30, 2011 ahead of the trial of seven suspects accused of the Marrakech Argana cafe where chief suspect, Adil Al Athmani, set off a nail-packed bomb, late April 28, killing at least 17 people, including eight French nationals. Among the charges facing the suspects are premeditated murder, explosives possession, and membership in a banned religious group, according to the state news agency MAP. Moroccan police say the main suspect has loyalties to al-Qaida and tried to travel to Iraq and Chechnya.  (AP Photo/Abdeljalil Bounhar)AP - Seven people went on trial in Morocco Thursday for the bombing of a Marrakech tourist cafe that killed 17, one of the worst terrorist acts to hit the North African kingdom.


AP IMPACT: Teaching jihad in Indonesian prisons (AP)

Posted: 30 Jun 2011 04:29 AM PDT

In this June 6, 2011 photo, prisoners attend a religious class led by a jailed militant Arif Syaifudin, also known as 'Firdaus,' in Block F of the Porong, Indonesia prison in East Java. A sweeping crackdown on terrorism in the past decade has spawned a new problem in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation: militants now in jail are recruiting new followers to their cause. Firdaus was sentenced to eight years in jail in 2008 for providing shelter to Abu Dujana, one of the leaders of the Southeast Asian terror network Jemaah Islamiyah and sending money to southern Philippines in support of terrorism. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)AP - A sweeping crackdown on terrorism in the past decade has spawned a new problem in Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation: Militants in jail are recruiting new followers to their cause.


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