A
man received a six-year prison sentence Tuesday after admitting guilt
to terror and immigration offenses, British prosecutors said. Police
discovered images on his mobile phone showing an invoice for ammunition
worth $28.5 million and the hiring of a cargo plane to be used in Libya.
Abdurraouf Eshati, 29,
of Wrexham, Wales, was sentenced Tuesday at London's Old Bailey Court,
the Crown Prosecution Service said.
"The
information that was contained within those documents found on Eshati's
phone were considered likely to have supported and been useful to an
individual preparing to commit an act of terrorism," a Crown Prosecution
Service representative said.
"Such
was the scale of his activity, the court was told his arrest and the
finding of these documents has led to Italian authorities discovering
large-scale illegal arms supplies being imported from eastern Europe to
conflict zones in Libya and other places."
The
representative said, "The very fact that Eshati pleaded guilty to these
offenses on the first day of his trial is a testament to the strength
of the case and evidence brought against him."
The
prosecution said Eshati had been among 20 people found in a truck after
police searched it in Dover, a English port close to the entrance to
the Channel Tunnel linking Britain and France.
"He
was challenged and searched after he was seen by an officer to be
acting suspiciously and using his phone," a Crown Prosecution Service
statement said. "Following a search of his phone, two documents were
found which led to his arrest and charge for possessing a collection of
information likely to be of use to a person preparing or committing an
act of terrorism."
Police also discovered false papers that Eshati had given to an immigration tribunal in 2012, according to the prosecution.
No comments:
Post a Comment