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Hamdi Alqudsi found guilty of arranging for jihadists to travel to Syria | Hamdi Alqudsi found guilty of arranging for jihadists to travel to Syria |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A Sydney man who was in contact with a suspected Australian jihadist has been found guilty of making arrangements for seven men to travel to Syria to fight. | |
The New South Wales supreme court trial of Hamdi Alqudsi has heard how the 41-year-old facilitated flights and travel routes for seven men and gave them advice on how to exchange money and not draw attention to themselves between June and October 2013. | |
A jury on Tuesday found him guilty of seven counts of providing services with the intention of supporting hostile acts. | |
During the trial, the prosecution relied mostly upon a large cache of intercepted calls in Arabic and English, including some with the Australian alleged fighter Mohammad Ali Baryalei. | |
The pair talked about about border crossings, having “brothers” picked up from a Turkish airport and a battle in which Baryalei cried after seeing a man killed before his eyes, the court sitting at Parramatta heard. | |
In another conversation, Baryalei, who had been allegedly fighting for Islamist group Jabhat al-Nusra, talked about being introduced to people from “the [Islamic] State” and his plans to take the “brothers” with him when he changed allegiances. | |
“Allahu Akbar!” the jury heard Alqudsi shouted repeatedly upon hearing the news. “I feel like crying, brother.” | |
Alqudsi’s defence barrister Scott Corish had suggested his client could have thought the men were going to Syria for humanitarian reasons and questioned whether his actions qualified as providing services. | |
He submitted Alqudsi was a man who cared about people, citing a conversation in which he talked about trying to raise $10,000 to smuggle 20 people from Syria into Turkey ahead of expected bombings. | |
But prosecutor David Staehli SC said there was no way the jury could find the calls between Alqudsi and Baryalei suggested a humanitarian purpose. | |
The court had heard conversations in which one of Alqudsi’s recruits asked about what happened when he moved into the “unseen”. | |
“It’s just a bullet between him and seeing the beautiful face of Allah,” Alqudsi told the man’s travel partner. | |
In another conversation, Alqudsi asked a recruit’s concerned wife how she would react upon news he had been martyred. | |
“Of course I would cry,” the court heard the woman said. “But I would say praise be to Allah because this is what we’ve wanted.” | |
Jihadist literature and pictures of men with guns were allegedly found during raids on the southwest Sydney homes he shared with his two wives. |
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