Trial begins of doctors accused of attempted car bomb murders

By KUNA,

London : The trial of two doctors accused of attempting to murder hundreds of people with car bomb attacks in London and Glasgow, Scotland, was beginning Thursday, lawyers said.


Support TwoCircles

Bilal Abdulla, 29 and Mohammed Asha, 28, are being held in custody accused of conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to cause explosions.

Prosecutors were opening their case against the two men at Woolwich Crown Court, south-east London.

The trial judge told potential jurors yesterday that prosecutors believe the pair were motivated by a fundamental form of Islam.

Iraqi-born Abdulla was arrested after a burning Jeep was driven into the main terminal building at Glasgow Airport on June 30 last year.

Jordanian Asha, a neurologist, was arrested on a major motorway in northern England, later that day.

In the early hours of June 29, two Mercedes cars containing petrol, gas cylinders and nails were driven into central London.

One was discovered outside the “Tiger, Tiger” nightclub in Haymarket, causing hundreds of revellers to be evacuated.

The second car, parked in adjoining Cockspur Street, was towed to a nearby car pound. It was made safe later that day.

Abdulla and Asha deny the offences.

The two men have worked in state-funded National Health Service hospitals in Glasgow, Staffordshire, northern England, south Wales and Cambridge, southern England.

A third man, Kafeel Ahmed, 28, died 33 days later from critical burns suffered in the airport attack.

He was the driver of the vehicle.

Both men are accused of conspiring with Ahmed and others unknown to murder and cause explosions likely to endanger life between January 1, 2006 and July 1, 2007.

SUPPORT TWOCIRCLES HELP SUPPORT INDEPENDENT AND NON-PROFIT MEDIA. DONATE HERE