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Four men 'planned to bomb Territorial Army base' Four 'planned to bomb Territorial Army base' with toy car
(35 minutes later)
A court has heard details of how four British men discussed bombing a Territorial Army base in Luton. A court has heard details of how four British men discussed bombing a Territorial Army base in Luton by driving a toy car beneath its gate.
Zahid Iqbal, 31, Mohammed Sharfaraz Ahmed, 25, Syed Farhan Hassain, 21, and Umar Arshad, 24, from Luton, pleaded guilty to terror offences in March.Zahid Iqbal, 31, Mohammed Sharfaraz Ahmed, 25, Syed Farhan Hassain, 21, and Umar Arshad, 24, from Luton, pleaded guilty to terror offences in March.
They have admitted facilitating, planning and encouraging travel overseas contrary to Section 5 of Terrorism Act 2006. They have admitted facilitating, planning and encouraging travel overseas.
They are due to be sentenced at Woolwich Crown Court in London.They are due to be sentenced at Woolwich Crown Court in London.
The men were arrested following a series of anti-terror raids in Luton, Bedfordshire, in 2012. BBC home affairs correspondent Matt Prodger, who is at the hearing, reported that the four men smiled and giggled as the court was played recordings of conversations in which they discussed travelling to Pakistan for terror training, buying guns and making explosives,
Ringleader
They were also recorded talking about attaching an improvised explosive device to a toy remote-controlled car, driving it through a gap beneath the gate of the TA base, and detonating it beneath a military vehicle.
Max Hill QC, for the prosecution, told the court the men had carried out physical training exercises in Snowdonia and the Brecon Beacons in preparation for travelling to Pakistan - where they expected to join groups linked to al-Qaeda.
He said the men were subjects of an investigation by counter-terrorism police and MI5 into the movement of individuals from the UK to Pakistan "for extremist purposes linked to al-Qaeda."
He said: "They discussed making an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) following instructions from an Inspire magazine which they planned to adapt.
"They also identified a target for such an attack, namely a Territorial Army base in their locality, although they also discussed targeting multiple sites at one time."
Iqbal was the ringleader who organised travel and training, and Ahmed was actively involved in the radicalisation and recruitment of others - organising physical training for the men and the purchase of survival equipment, the court heard.
In a recording from 15 January 2011, Iqbal said: "At least you'll get to meet the brothers and then it's up to them.
"They might even use you for something else in the meantime, cos there's lots of different other things innit? There's people making weapons there, helping them making the bombs and stuff, other people transporting - maybe they will use you for something like that… you will be checked out and stuff."