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imam Abu Hamza to be sentenced for U.S. terrorism conviction
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[January 09, 2015]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - For years, the
radical imam Abu Hamza al-Masri delivered incendiary sermons at a London
mosque, using words that U.S. and UK authorities say helped inspire a
generation of militants, including British would-be shoe bomber Richard
Reid.
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On Friday, he will have one final chance to convince a U.S. judge
that he should not spend the rest of his life in prison, eight
months after a federal jury in New York convicted him of terrorism
charges.
Abu Hamza, 56, is scheduled to appear in U.S. District Court in
Manhattan at 10 a.m. to be sentenced.
The one-eyed, handless Abu Hamza gained notoriety for his fiery
rhetoric and use of a hook in place of his missing right hand. He
was found guilty of providing a satellite phone and advice to Yemeni
militants who kidnapped Western tourists in 1998. Four hostages died
in the operation.
He was also convicted of sending two followers to Oregon to
establish a militant training camp and of dispatching an associate
to Afghanistan to aid al Qaeda and the Taliban against the United
States.
In their sentencing recommendation to Judge Katherine Forrest,
lawyers for Abu Hamza focused on his need for specialized medical
care as a double amputee.
While they asked for a term shorter than life, they conceded that
any lengthy sentence would likely keep him behind bars until his
death and pressed Forrest to send Abu Hamza to a medical facility
instead of a maximum security prison.
Prosecutors urged a life sentence for a man they called a "global
terrorist leader who orchestrated plots around the world" and said
in court papers that the question of where Abu Hamza is imprisoned
should be left to the Bureau of Prisons.
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Abu Hamza, whose real name is Mustafa Kamel Mustafa, testified in
his defense at trial. He denied he sent anyone to Oregon or
Afghanistan and claimed he acted as an intermediary during the Yemen
kidnapping in search of a peaceful resolution.
He also asserted for the first time that he lost his hands in an
accidental explosion two decades ago in Pakistan, where he said he
was working as an engineer, contradicting widespread reports that he
lost the limbs while fighting the Soviets in Afghanistan in the
1980s.
Abu Hamza spent eight years in prison in Britain for inciting
violence before his extradition in 2012 to the United States to face
terrorism charges.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by David Ingram and Dan Grebler)
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