Terror case dropped

Re: Terror case dropped

phir kis ko pata hai

Re: Terror case dropped

Well, this guy is not as innocent as you are making him out to be. He himself admits that he gave up his medical career and went to attend a training camp of Lashkar-e-Toiba because he wanted to become a Jehadi and a martyr. He went to Pakistan with a convicted terrorist Faheem Lodhi and completed three weeks of terrorist training. Only after finding fighting to be physically tough he decided to go back to Australia.
He has gotten off because the Australian police were too aggresive and did not follow rules correctly in interviewing him and collecting evidence. He is a Jehadi, hates western culture and wants to become a martyr. So the case against him had some substance and he was arrested and prosecuted for those reasons.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22748933-601,00.html
"In late 2002 he wrote to his family: “I’m fed up with Westerners. Western patients look at me as if I’m a frog. They don’t wish to speak English to me. How can I spend five to six years with them?” Disheartened and frustrated, he was ripe for recruitment, when he was targeted by a fellow immigrant from Pakistan, Faheem Khalid Lodhi, who is appealing against a 20-year sentence handed down last year for facilitating terrorist acts.
When the older man invited him to travel to Pakistan to join the jihad, Mr Ul-Haque readily agreed. He wrote again to his family, saying that he was planning to join LET to fight the Indian army in Kashmir and that, God willing, he would die a martyr.
Appalled by his actions, Mr Ul-Haque’s brother and father followed him to the LET camp to persuade him to come home.
Mr Ul-Haque finished the 20-day beginners’ training course, which he later described as being “like kindergarten” and decided, to his family’s relief, that he was “physically incapable” of being a jihadist. “I decided I wanted to be a doctor, not a fighter,” Mr Ul-Haque later told the Australian Federal Police. "