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Islamist trial

January 25, 2012

A German and an Austrian went on trial in Berlin on Wednesday charged with recruiting Islamist militants and releasing a propaganda video threatening attacks.

https://p.dw.com/p/13pc0
Videos like this one released by militants have threatened attacks against coalition forces in Afghanistan
Suspected recruiters founded a group called German Taliban MujahideenImage: AP

German Yusuf Ocak and Austrian Maqsood Lodin were arrested last year and charged with membership in a terrorist organization. Prosecutors say both underwent terrorist training in the lawless frontier region of Pakistan.

Ocak is accused of traveling to the border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan in May of 2009 to take part in armed combat against NATO forces. He is also charged with helping to found a group called the German Taliban Mujahideen, which in one Internet video threatened Germany over its troop deployment in Afghanistan.

Austrian Maqsood Lodin hiding his face in the Berlin court room
The defendants have refused to commentImage: AP

Video showed German landmarks

In the video, which they described as "chilling," prosecutors said the two men threatened German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was campaigning for re-election, that Germany would face "a rude awakening" if she failed to pull Berlin's troops out of Afghanistan. There were suggestive shots of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, bank buildings in Frankfurt and Oktoberfest in Munich.

Through a voice analysis of the video, investigators were led to Ocak, who was then extradited to Germany from Austria in June of last year.

Prosecutors say that Ocak met Lodin in 2010 in Pakistan. They allegedly returned to Europe in January 2011 and together tried to drum up recruits and funding in Germany for al Qaeda on the orders of the militant network.

Both defendants on Wednesday declined to address the allegations against them in court. If they are found guilty, they face up to 10 years in prison. A ruling is expected sometime in June.

Author: Gregg Benzow (AFP, AP)
Editor: Nancy Isenson