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US sentences mentally ill Briton to 20 years

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AFP New York
A mentally ill British man who set up a violent extremist training camp in the United States under orders from radical preacher Abu Hamza was sentenced to 20 years on two terror counts in New York today.

Haroon Aswat, 41, cut a despondent figure in the US federal court, dressed in a faded navy prison shirt with his long dark hair plaited into braids over his scalp and down his back.

He has already spent 11 years in custody since his arrest -- meaning, due to time served and good behavior, he could qualify for early release in six years and can apply to serve the remainder of his sentence in Britain.
 

He pleaded guilty in March to one count of providing material support to Al-Qaeda and one count of conspiring to support the terror group, which carried out the 9/11 attacks on America.

In 2000, he spent six weeks on the West Coast in Seattle and Bly, Oregon at the behest of Abu Hamza, as part of a plot to set up a training camp for recruits wanting to fight in Afghanistan.

He then traveled to Afghanistan and Pakistan in mid-2001 in order to attend a training camp.

After the 9/11 attacks and the start of US military action in Afghanistan, he fled to South Africa, where he had family, and embarked on a life as an itinerant salesman of pirated CDs of Islamic chants and prayer, his defense lawyer told the court.

Aswat, who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia, was arrested in Zambia in 2005.

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First Published: Oct 17 2015 | 1:28 AM IST

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