Zawahiri treated me in Kabul, American tells US trial

Zawahiri treated me in Kabul, American tells US trial
Updated 02 May 2014
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Zawahiri treated me in Kabul, American tells US trial

Zawahiri treated me in Kabul, American tells US trial

NEW YORK: An American terror convict told Thursday of how Osama bin Laden’s then deputy treated him for a cold with honey and seeds, as a New York trial heard intriguing new details of everyday life inside Al-Qaeda.
Egyptian doctor Ayman Al-Zawahiri, credited with being the brains behind the extremist network, became head of Al-Qaeda when bin Laden was killed by US troops three years ago.
James Ujaama, 48, told the trial of British hate preacher Abu Hamza that he fell ill with a “very bad cold” while in Kabul in late 2000, a year before the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington
“He treated me,” Ujaama told US prosecutor John Cronan, who flashed up a picture of the bearded Zawahiri. Ujaama said he didn’t know Zawahiri’s name or position at the time.
“He gave me some honey and black seed,” Ujaama told the Manhattan court where Abu Hamza is on trial for 11 kidnapping and terror charges. “He was very caring.”
Ujaama worked for Abu Hamza between 2000 and 2001, running the website of the cleric’s “Supporters of Sharia” organization based in London.
He was jailed for six years in the United States on a terror conviction but was released on bail in 2010 after agreeing to testify at the government’s request.
In 2000, he traveled to New York to raise money for Muslim families to move to Afghanistan, get Web-development training and buy computer equipment.
Later that year, he traveled to Afghanistan, tasked by Abu Hamza with accompanying British recruit Feroz Abbasi and doling out thousands of dollars to a girls’ school.
But Ujaama said he left Abbasi in Pakistan and went alone to Afghanistan after securing safe passage from the Taleban’s then-foreign minister.
He took 2,500 British pounds ($4,200 today) to a girls’ school in the city of Khost and 1,500 pounds split between three individuals, who included an explosives expert who had cared for Abu Hamza. The expert looked after the preacher when he had both arms blown off in an explosion in Afghanistan years ago, Ujaama said. Abu Hamza is also blind in one eye.
Ujaama, who enjoyed a two-decade career in petty crime that include disorderly conduct and theft, said he also installed software on Taleban computers.
He then oversaw the delivery by courier of 6,000 British pounds, computers for the girls’ school, and jewelry for widows and children of mujahideen fighters, all sent by Abu Hamza, he said.
Abu Hamza was angry when he confessed to leaving Abbasi behind in Pakistan and ordered him to go back and get him, orders Ujaama said he ignored.
Ujaama said he was supposed to return to Afghanistan in September 2001 to deliver more money to the school and help set up a computer center for the Taleban. But he was in Pakistan when the 9/11 attacks happened and could not secure safe passage into Afghanistan.
In an email to Ujaama that was shown to the court, Abu Hamza praised the assassination of anti-Taleban warlord Ahmad Shah Massoud, killed by Al-Qaeda on Sept. 9, 2001.
“Massoud died in a human bomb, and it is beneficial to all Muslims,” Abu Hamza wrote. Ujaama said their organization’s website was shut down after 9/11 attacks and that he then fell out with Abu Hamza. “I felt like he just did not care about anyone apart from himself,” Ujaama said.
Ujaama accused Abu Hamza of pressuring him to go Afghanistan, when this could get him into serious trouble or get him killed. He said was too scared to give the money to some Arabs, an alternative plan suggested by Abu Hamza.
Mustafa Kamel Mustafa, 56, better known in Britain as Abu Hamza al-Masri, has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
He is accused of providing support to Al-Qaeda, of wanting to set up a computer lab for the Taleban and of sending recruits to Afghanistan for training.