The Daily Telegraph

Trial of kidnap cell with links to Choudary

Two men accused of being part of a group associated with hate preacher go on trial in Portugal next week

- By Mike Wright and Gerard Couzens released

A terror cell linked to Anjem Choudary went on to kidnap the missing British journalist John Cantlie, a Lisbon court is due to hear next week. Two men accused of being part of the “Leyton Cell”, named after the London borough where its Portuguese members met, before a number became members of Islamic State, are due to appear in court on Monday. The defendants are Romulo Rodrigues da Costa, a hip hop music producer, and an alleged IS financier and recruiter, Cassimo Ture.

A TERROR cell linked to Anjem Choudary, the hate preacher, went on to kidnap John Cantlie, the missing British journalist, a Portuguese court is due to hear next week.

Two men accused of being part of the “Leyton Cell”, named after the east London borough where its Portuguese members met before several travelled to Syria and became prominent members of Islamic State, are due to appear in court in Lisbon on Monday.

The defendants are Romulo Rodrigues da Costa, a hip-hop music producer whose brothers have been identified as known associates of Jihadi John; and an alleged Islamic State financier and recruiter, Cassimo Ture, who was exposed late last year as living on benefits in London with his family.

The pair stand accused, along with six other men, of supporting or funding the cell.

However, the other six alleged members are either missing, presumed dead, or detained in Syria following the military disintegra­tion of Islamic State.

Among the missing defendants are Celso Rodrigues da Costa and Sadjo Ture, whose suspected involvemen­t in the July 2012 kidnap of Mr Cantlie on the Syrian-turkish border sparked a long-running Portuguese investigat­ion, which has led to next week’s trial.

Mr Cantlie is still missing in Syria after he was forced to regularly appear in propaganda videos for the terror organisati­on. As late as last year the UK government said it had reason to believe he is still alive despite reports he had been killed in airstrikes.

It has previously been reported by The Sunday Times that members of the cell had links to Choudary, the UK’S most notorious hate preacher, and his followers after a number including Celso Rodrigues da Costa and his brother, Edgar, moved to London in the mid-noughties to pursue dreams of forging profession­al football careers.

In 2014 Celso – wearing a ski mask and holding an AK-47 – appeared in an Islamic State video, in which he claimed he had played for Arsenal.

It later emerged he had merely attended an open trial for the Premier League club where he had failed to be selected.

The wives of Celso and Edgar Rodrigues da Costa, Reema and Zara Iqbal, were last year stripped of their UK citizenshi­p after travelling to Syria.

The jihadi bride sisters are reported to be among 150 people who could attempt to come back to the UK after a recent Court of Appeal ruling that Shamima Begum should be allowed into Britain following the revoking of her citizenshi­p in 2019 on national security grounds.

Meanwhile, Choudary remains in the UK under some of the strictest licence conditions in UK legal history after being released from prison in 2018. The 53-year-old was jailed in 2016 for a string of terror offences, in which he was linked to 15 terror plots and hundreds of British jihadists who fled to Syria to fight.

Choudary is currently living with his family in Iford, east London, and was one of the terror convicts who had his licence conditions reviewed in the aftermath of the London Bridge stabbings last year. All eight Portuguese defendants are charged with three separate terrorist crimes, one of membership and support of a terrorist organisati­on; another of internatio­nal terrorism; and a third of financing terrorism.

A 291-page indictment ahead of the trial at Lisbon’s Court of Justice lists 42 bizarre code words that the alleged terror gang used to try to outwit investigat­ors behind phone taps.

The British police were referred to as Bongofia in phone conversati­ons between gang members, according to the prosecutio­n document. Germany was called Clisman or Klinsmann after the retired football star, and Syria was referred to as Discoteca – Disco in English.

The expression “Dar un beijinho na boca” – English for “Give a kiss on the mouth” really meant “Crossing the border”, according to prosecutor­s.

Turkey had three different names – Tiagao, Tomas and Tomoso – and Syria was also referred to by the woman’s name Susana.

Cassimo Ture, 45, is accused by the Portuguese authoritie­s of helping fighters and jihadi brides from Britain travel to Islamic State’s former caliphate in a scheme allegedly financed by mass student loans and social services fraud.

The prosecutio­n indictment adds: “Romulo Rodrigues da Costa acted with the specific intention of supporting his brothers, morally initially because he defended the same radical ideology, and then materially.

“As far as Celso was concerned he provided him with the passport that enabled him to join Islamic State and become a fighter.”

Costa and Ture will be asked to take the stand on Monday.

 ??  ?? Above: Anjem Choudary shopping near his home in east London last year after being released on licence in 2018, two years after being jailed for terror offences. Left: John Cantlie, the British journalist, who is still missing after being kidnapped in 2012
Above: Anjem Choudary shopping near his home in east London last year after being released on licence in 2018, two years after being jailed for terror offences. Left: John Cantlie, the British journalist, who is still missing after being kidnapped in 2012
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 ??  ?? The defendants: Romulo Rodrigues da Costa, left; and Cassimo Ture
The defendants: Romulo Rodrigues da Costa, left; and Cassimo Ture
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