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        Suspected al-Qaida cell leader convicted
        (AP)
        Updated: 2005-09-26 21:17

        A suspected al-Qaida cell leader was convicted Monday of conspiring to commit murder in connection with the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States, concluding Europe's biggest trial of alleged members of the terrorist group, AP reported.


        A prison van, believed to be carrying at least one Al-qaida suspect, arrives at the National courthouse in Madrid Monday Sept. 26, 2005. Spain's National Court hands down the verdict in Europe's biggest trial of 24 Al-Qaida suspects Monday, including three who sentences of nearly 75,000 years each for allegedly helping plot the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States. [AP]

        Imad Yarkas, one of 24 defendants on trial, was sentenced to 27 years in prison for the guilty verdicts of conspiracy and of being a leader of a terrorist organization.

        Two other suspects were acquitted of charges of helping plot the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, although one of them was found guilty of collaborating with a terrorist organization.

        Twenty-one others also stood trial, but on charges not directly related to Sept. 11. Of those, 16 were convicted of belonging to or collaborating with a terrorist organization and five were acquitted.

        All 24 were expressionless as the verdicts were read out in the National Court.

        Prosecutors had accused Yarkas, a 42-year-old Spaniard of Syrian origin, of being an accomplice to murder and requested a jail term of nearly 75,000 years — 25 years for each of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the suicide airliner attacks in 2001.

        Yarkas had been charged with arranging a meeting in the Tarragona region of Spain in July 2001 at which key Sept. 11 plotters — alleged suicide pilot Mohamed Atta and plot coordinator Ramzi Binsalshibh — met to decide last-minute details, including the date of the massacre.

        Another suspect, Moroccan Driss Chebli, was also alleged to have helped set up the meeting. He was acquitted of murder charges but convicted of collaborating with a terrorist group and sentenced to six years.

        The third suspect facing specific Sept. 11 charges, Ghasoub al-Abrash Ghalyoun, was acquitted. The Syrian-born Spaniard was indicted over detailed video he shot of the World Trade Center and other landmarks during a trip to several U.S. cities in 1997.

        Judge Baltasar Garzon had said the tapes were passed on to al-Qaida and amounted to the genesis of planning for the attacks on the U.S. Ghalyoun said during the trial he shot the tapes as an innocent tourist.

        Ghalyoun was also acquitted of charges of being a member of a terrorist organization.



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