The Daily Telegraph

‘Beatles’ deny torturing Western hostages

Londoners plead not guilty in US court to eight charges and request trial after transfer from Iraq

- By Josie Ensor US Correspond­ent

BRITISH Islamic State “Beatles” Alexanda Kotey and El Shafee Elsheikh have pleaded not guilty to charges of kidnapping and torturing Western hostages.

Kotey, 36, and Elsheikh, 32, who were transferre­d to the US from Iraq this week, yesterday denied eight charges of conspiracy to commit homicide, hostage-taking resulting in death, and material support for a foreign terrorist organisati­on, before a judge at the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia and requested a jury trial.

The trial, which families of the Beatles’ victims feared would never come, is set to be one of the most significan­t terrorism hearings in US history.

The four-man Beatles cell – so-called because of their accents – is alleged to have captured and killed a number of Western hostages between 2012-15, including two British aid workers and four US nationals, and are implicated in the deaths of two-dozen others during their time in IS’S caliphate in Syria.

District Judge Thomas Selby Ellis III inquired into the men’s grasp of English and whether they understood the proceeding­s.

Both Kotey and Elsheikh were born and grew up in west London and stated that English was their first language. Kotey responded to several questions from the judge with “yes your honour”.

Nina Ginsberg, a lawyer for Elsheikh, noted that it has been hard to communicat­e with her client, with no in-person visits allowed at the prison because of the Covid-19 pandemic and limited access to video conference or phone lines. In response, the judge said he would see what he could do.

Judge Ellis accepted the defence’s proposal to waive a speedy trial to give them time to go through the “considerab­le discovery” and scheduled the next hearing for Jan 15, when a trial date is due to be decided.

The indictment, filed on Wednesday, alleges that the Londoners “inflicted pain, suffering and cruelty”, which included victims being put through mock executions, electric shocks, chokeholds causing blackouts, food deprivatio­n, being put in stress positions for days, being beaten, and subjected to waterboard­ing and “rumbles”, which saw them being made to fight one another.

Mohammed Emwazi, the ringleader, was killed in a US airstrike in 2015, while the fourth member of the group, Aine Davis, is in prison in Turkey.

The men’s transfer had been held up by disagreeme­nts between the US and the UK as to whether the latter would allow the men to stand trial in the US over objection over the death penalty.

The mother of Elsheikh had sought to block a US prosecutio­n because of the prospect of execution if convicted. She lost her appeal at the High Court after Bill Barr, the US attorney general, gave assurances that he would not seek the death penalty for the men.

Last month the UK handed over vital evidence on Kotey and Elsheikh, which is thought to include intercepte­d communicat­ions, interviews with victims and witness testimony, and was vital to the prosecutio­n’s case.

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