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Madrid bombing convictions despite flimsy evidence
Informant gave advance warning to Civil Guard
By Paul Bond
7 November 2007
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The sentences handed down at the culmination of the Madrid
train bombing trial have served to underscore its political character.
The court placed the main responsibility for organising the
March 2004 bombings, which killed 191 people, on the suspects
who blew themselves up in the Madrid suburb of Leganes three weeks
later. Much of the case against the accused related to their links
to these men. However, many of the 29 accused were petty criminals
and informants, who claim to have given the police information
that could have prevented the attacks. In addition one of the
chief suspects was acquitted for lack of evidence.
The 20 Arabs and nine Spaniards were charged with offences
ranging from murder, stealing explosives, and forging documents
to membership in terrorist organisations. All pleaded not guilty.
The prosecution was seeking sentences of 38,656 years for the
three men suspected of having masterminded the attacks, who were
charged with 191 murders and 1,841 attempted murders. Other defendants
faced sentences of between four and 27 years.
Seven of the defendants were acquitted. Maximum sentences were
passed down against three of the main suspects but another accused
of having been the mastermind behind the atrocity was acquitted
because of the flimsiness of the evidence against them.
In his sentencing, Judge Javier Gomez Bermudez said that the
convictions were based on solid evidence of involvement.
The trial had established the chain of events leading up to the
bombings and had also categorically ruled out the idea that the
Basque separatist ETA (Euskadi ta AskatasunaBasque Homeland
and Freedom) was involved, he continued.
The verdict states that the bombings were planned by an Islamist
terrorist cell influenced by Al Qaeda, but not directly linked
to it. No evidence was uncovered that Al Qaeda had ordered or
financed the bombings. According to the investigation, the bombings
were financed by local drug deals. Many of the accused were known
to the police as small-time drug dealers, and many had acted as
police informants.
Leadership of the cell was attributed to the men who blew themselves
up in Leganes. Serhane Ben Abdelmajid was allegedly the architect
of the plot, while the former drug trafficker Jamal Ahmidan was
described as its driving force. Serhane Ben Abdelmajid is said
to have had communication with alleged Al Qaeda members.
In the dock the Moroccan nationals Jamal Zougam and Otman El
Gnaoui were both convicted of helping plant the 10 bags of bombs
on four trains. Zougam was sentenced to 42,922 years for belonging
to a terrorist organisation, 191 counts of murder, 1,856 counts
of attempted murder and four counts of committing a terrorist
act. El Gnaoui received an additional two years for document fraud.
The main Spanish defendant, José Emilio Suarez Trashorras,
a former Asturian miner who supplied the explosives, was sentenced
to 34,715 years for five counts of committing terrorist acts,
191 counts of attempted murder, and 192 counts of murder. (He
was also convicted of the death of a policeman killed in the explosion
at Leganes). None of these three was accused by the prosecution
of having masterminded the attacks. Under Spanish law the longest
they will serve is 40 years.
None of the men the prosecution accused of being the instigators
of the bombings was convicted of murder. Rabei Osman Sayed, known
as The Egyptian, was acquitted. The only evidence
produced was extensive wiretaps, which Sayed denied had been accurately
translated. The only charge the court could have made stick was
that of membership of a terrorist organisation, but the Spanish
courts have a tradition of not convicting someone of the same
crime for which they have already been sentenced elsewhere. Sayed
is currently serving eight years in Italy for membership of a
terrorist organisation.
Membership of a terrorist organisation was also the only conviction
secured against both Hassan El Haski, the alleged Spanish leader
of the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group, and Youssef Belhadj,
alleged to be the European spokesman for Al Qaeda. Nearly half
of those sentenced were convicted only of this crime. El Haski
and Belhadj were sentenced to 15 and 12 years respectively. The
prosecution had sought thousands of years sentences for
them.
Rachid Aglif was sentenced to 12 years for belonging to a terrorist
organisation, and received another six years for possession of
explosives. His sometime associate Rafa Zouhier was sentenced
to 10 years for trafficking explosives.
In one of the most remarkable developments to emerge from the
trial, Zouhier consistently claimed to have given the Civil Guard
enough information to have prevented the attacks, culminating
in handing over samples of dynamite. The Civil Guard responded
by claiming that he did not warn them of the impending attack
until it was too late. The petty crook Zouhier was certainly being
handled by Civil Guard minders throughout the period
before the attacks.
At the time of the bombings, the then-ruling Popular Party
(PP) immediately blamed ETA. The right-wing PP was driven from
power in a wave of popular hostility when it became clear that
the intelligence services were in fact pursuing Al Qaeda links
to the bombings. There was widespread anger that the PPs
support for the unpopular war against Iraq had made Spain a target.
The PP, for their part, continued to insist on ETAs involvement,
and accused the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE) of having
mounted a coup to steal the election.
The PSOE and its supporters clearly hoped that the sentencing
of the remaining 28 defendants would put an end to the issue once
and for all and make it impossible for the PP to continue making
its accusations and defending its own actions. The day before
the sentences El Pais, which is close to the PSOE, promised
that closure looms. Three days before the announcements,
Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero told PSOE officials
that they would set an example of an advanced democracy
pursuing the fight against Islamist terrorism through the courts.
PP Secretary Angel Acebes did seem to be retreating from the
partys hardline position on ETA being responsible, saying
that it had never had a conspiracy theory about the
bombings. Acebes, who was Interior Minister at the time of the
bombings, declared that the PP simply wanted justice and
for the guilty to be convicted.
When the sentences came, however, they were hardly the resounding
success the PSOE had been predicting. Zapatero declared that the
convictions had demonstrated the power of rule of law and that
justice was done. Along with the compensation to the
victims, announced at the same time, he again insisted that the
sentences should provide closure for the whole of Spain. However,
although it is now impossible to maintain that ETA was implicated
in the bombings, the PP has no intention of making its peace with
the PSOE. Though forced to make a certain retreat, it has at the
same time shifted its line of attack.
Party leader Mariano Rajoy insisted that The case is
not totally closed because the people who had incited
or inspired the attacks had not been convicted. The PP would
support any other investigation without limits that would
serve the cause of justice, he said. The Association of
Victims of Terror (AVT), which has close links to the PP, also
described the sentence as merely one step towards finding
out the truth. The PP is also insisting that the trial proved
that the bombings were not motivated by hostility to Spanish involvement
in Iraq. When a PSOE minister said Repeat after me: it wasnt
ETA, the PPs Eduardo Zaplana responded, I would
ask Zapatero to say clearly that It wasnt Iraq.
See Also:
Spain: Arrests of Batasuna
leadership by Socialist Party ahead of elections
[25 October 2007]
Recycling Stalinist lies about
the Spanish Civil War
[6 October 2007]
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