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Sudan Tribune

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Sudanese suspects confess to killing USAID officer

September 21, 2008 (KHARTOUM) – Four suspects accused of murdering a US diplomat earlier this year made videotaped confessions about their role in the plot.

Sudanese Islamists (back R) accused of killing a US diplomat and his driver attend their trial in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on September 11, 2008 (AFP)
Sudanese Islamists (back R) accused of killing a US diplomat and his driver attend their trial in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on September 11, 2008 (AFP)
John Granville, 33, who worked for the US Agency for International Development (USAID), and his 40-year-old Sudanese driver Abdel-Rahman Abbas were hit in their car by a hail of bullets before dawn on New Year’s Day.

There are five suspects currently standing trial for allegedly carrying out the assassination.

Today the court watched the confessions on the videos and two of the suspects said they shot at Granville and Rahma with a 9mm pistol and a Kalashnikov rifle.

In the videos one of the defendants Abdel Basit al-Hajj Hassan, 29, said they had spotted Granville in a U.S. embassy vehicle, drove up alongside him and opened fire.

“With the help of God we killed the American infidel…It all took 12 to 15 seconds” Hassan said.

The suspects also said they were planning a second attack in February on an US target when they were arrested.

The defendants told the judge in the last hearing that the police extracted confessions from them by force. The group members could face the death sentence if found guilty. The hearing has been adjourned until September 21st.

Police General Abdel-Rahim Ahmed Abdel-Rahim told the judges earlier this month that the suspects planned to kill an unidentified British diplomat to revenge for a British schoolteacher’s Gillian Gibbons decision to let her young students to name a toy bear Muhammad.

Gibbons received a jail sentence of 15 days but was pardoned by Al-Bashir.

The suspects failed to corner the British diplomat to shoot him, the police officer said.

In the preliminary hearing on August 31st the Sudanese prosecutor Mohamed Al-Mustafa Musa said that the group came from the town of Atbara North of the capital Khartoum with the intention of striking Western targets on New Years Eve.

Among those in the dock was a 23-year-old son of the head of Ansar al-Sunna, a pacifist Muslim sect in Sudan that has no political affiliations but has links to the orthodox Wahhabi sect dominant in Saudi Arabia.

The others were listed as an engineering student, a merchant and a former security officer from Khartoum and a driver from Atbara, in northern Sudan.

The judge adjourned the case to September 11 to allow Granville’s family to appoint a lawyer and to find a larger courtroom, at the request of the defense.

The suspects were part of a cell that is believed to have been formed last year after Sudan’s president, Omer Al-Bashir, vehemently rejected the idea of a United Nations peacekeeping mission to Darfur.

Sudanese police said that the suspects received 5,000 Saudi riyals ($9,300) to travel to Somalia and launch Jihad (Islamic holy war) there. However the group members changed their minds for unknown reasons.

(ST)

2 Comments

  • Atenymaker
    Atenymaker

    Sudanese suspects confess to killing USAID officer
    Every live lost is counting to him who done show mercy.
    Every life that is losing now still NCP.

    Press them so hard, they will confess more of what they have commited priately, this one was in brought daylight. The culomnist are welknown.

    Reply
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