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Police pictures of bombers seen Court sees footage of 7/7 bombers
(about 3 hours later)
A jury has seen previously unreleased surveillance footage of the 7 July suicide bomber Mohammed Siddique Khan.A jury has seen previously unreleased surveillance footage of the 7 July suicide bomber Mohammed Siddique Khan.
The police footage from March 2004, 16 months before the bombings, shows Khan with fellow bomber Shehzad Tanweer, outside a London kebab shop.The police footage from March 2004, 16 months before the bombings, shows Khan with fellow bomber Shehzad Tanweer, outside a London kebab shop.
The two men were on Green Street, Upton Park, with men prosecutors call other known committed terrorists.The two men were on Green Street, Upton Park, with men prosecutors call other known committed terrorists.
One of the men in the pictures is Waheed Ali. He and two others deny helping the 7 July bombers.One of the men in the pictures is Waheed Ali. He and two others deny helping the 7 July bombers.
In the footage, a group of men, including one individual known as Ausman, are seen near a kebab shop in East London. They walk directly past the lens of the camera which appears to be in a hidden location. In the footage, a group of men, including one individual known as Ausman, are seen near a kebab shop in East London.
They walk directly past the lens of the camera which appears to be in a hidden location.
Waheed Ali, Sadeer Saleem and Mohammed Shakil deny the charge
Shehzad Tanweer, who killed seven when he blew himself up on a London Underground train near Aldgate station, is clearly seen wearing a Helly Hansen woolly hat. Siddique Khan appears as a stocky figure with short hair and a beard.Shehzad Tanweer, who killed seven when he blew himself up on a London Underground train near Aldgate station, is clearly seen wearing a Helly Hansen woolly hat. Siddique Khan appears as a stocky figure with short hair and a beard.
At the front of the group, say prosecutors, is Waheed Ali, wearing a blue baseball cap. Other men associated with Ausman are in the group.At the front of the group, say prosecutors, is Waheed Ali, wearing a blue baseball cap. Other men associated with Ausman are in the group.
The short clip of footage, recorded in the early evening of 24 March 2004, showed the men walking from right to left and then out of view.The short clip of footage, recorded in the early evening of 24 March 2004, showed the men walking from right to left and then out of view.
Waheed Ali, 24, Sadeer Saleem, 27, and Mohammed Shakil, 31, are accused of assisting Mohammad Sidique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer, Jermain Lindsay and Hasib Hussain, in what prosecutors say was a reconnaissance mission for the 2005 attacks.Waheed Ali, 24, Sadeer Saleem, 27, and Mohammed Shakil, 31, are accused of assisting Mohammad Sidique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer, Jermain Lindsay and Hasib Hussain, in what prosecutors say was a reconnaissance mission for the 2005 attacks.
Khan, Tanweer, Lindsay and Hussain killed 52 people in four separate suicide bombings on London's transport network on 7 July.Khan, Tanweer, Lindsay and Hussain killed 52 people in four separate suicide bombings on London's transport network on 7 July.
Bugged conversation
Paul Taylor, prosecuting, told the jury that Mohammed Siddique Khan was recorded later that evening on an audio probe in the bedsit home of Ausman.
Siddique Khan: Recorded in March 2004
Mr Taylor read a transcript of the recording to the jury.
In one conversation in the flat, Siddique Khan is transcribed as telling the other men that he counsels children at a Leeds school. The conversation covers discussions about raising money through credit cards and other means.
"I've placed a lot of emphasis on the scholars that we have today," he says.
"They're not doing their jobs, if they were we would not be in the situation - we sit on our backsides moaning and munching for the rest of our lives."
The transcript shows another man named Azhar replying: "If more of them had stuck by their guns they are not going to arrest every single one of the them, are they and if they did there would be uproar."
Siddique Khan continues: "There are so many strong youths out there raise up [as] speak at the scholars.
"We wouldn't be like this, there would be real buzz in the air much more acceptable, we would not have to be running and ducking and diving from our families from communities this and issues we face."
The trial continues.The trial continues.