Bomb plot man religious, not militant-Pakistan kin

By Staff
|
Google Oneindia News

DOONGI, Pakistan, May 1 (Reuters) Pakistani relatives of a British man jailed for life for plotting al Qaeda-inspired bomb attacks today said he was a religious man but had never shown any hint of militancy.

Waheed Mahmood was one of five Britons jailed for life in London yesterday for plotting attacks on targets across Britain ranging from nightclubs to trains and a shopping centre.

''We're sad but helpless. There's nothing we can do,'' said Mahmood's uncle, farmer Chaudhry Manga, in the village of Doongi, in rolling hills and wheat fields 60 km southeast of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

''He was a religious person and used to offer prayers regularly.

Perhaps that was his only mistake,'' Manga said wryly, puffing on a cigarette in his modest living room.

Mahmood's grandfather first went to Britain in the 1950s or 1960s, villagers said.

Mahmood, who relatives said was in his early 30s, was born in Britain but built a two-storey villa-style house of brown tiles and white walls in his family village.

Married to a cousin, Mahmood came to stay in the house with his three daughters and son but left and went back to Britain when his children got sick, villagers said.

He hadn't been seen for about three years, relatives and other villagers said. His house was empty today, although villagers said a watchman was looking after it.

''When he stayed here I never saw anything suspicious about him,'' Manga said. ''I can tell from a person's face what they're like. Had anything been wrong with Waheed, I would have stopped him.'' ''FORMIDABLE WEAPON'' Mahmood and his gang planned to use 600 kg of ammonium nitrate fertiliser to make bombs in revenge for Britain's support for the United States after the September 11, 2001, attacks, prosecutors said.

Counter-terrorism experts said the gang could have produced a ''formidable weapon'' more powerful than some of the devices used in devastating attacks around the world in recent years.

After the longest terrorism trial in British history, the five -- at least some of whom got militant training in Pakistani camps -- were found guilty of plotting to cause an explosion likely to endanger life.

''He was religious but a very nice person,'' remembered villager Mohammad Fazal, stopping to talk outside the village mosque.

''He never had a quarrel with anyone. We know him well, we know the whole family. They're all religious people but we never knew of them doing anything wrong.'' The trial revealed that police tracking the gang had established links between them and British Islamists who killed 52 people in suicide bombings in London on July 7, 2005.

REUTERS KD RS1826

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