Khalid al-Fawwaz was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan
after being convicted of four conspiracy counts in New York in
February.
He was not charged with helping to plan the attacks, which killed
224 and injured more than 4,000. Instead, prosecutors said he was
bin Laden's "bridge to the West" in London, disseminating the al
Qaeda leader's violent messages to media outlets and sending
supplies to the group's members in Africa.
U.S. authorities also accused al-Fawwaz of running an al Qaeda
training camp in Afghanistan in the 1990s and helping to establish a
cell in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi that later conducted
surveillance ahead of the embassy bombing there.
Several victims and relatives on Friday urged Kaplan to impose a
life sentence.
"I worship the same God you say you do," said Ellen Karas, an
embassy worker left permanently blind by the August 7, 1998, bombing
in Nairobi. "But my God is not a vengeful and angry God. My God is
full of love."
Edith Bartley, whose father and brother died in the Nairobi blast,
said the attacks had caused her "unbearable pain and sorrow."
"Mr. Al-Fawwaz, you are a travesty to the human race," she said.
Before the sentence was imposed, al-Fawwaz turned and addressed the
victims, saying words could not express his sadness at the "tragic
violence that occurred."
"I do not support violence," he continued. "I never intended for any
of my activities to contribute to it."
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His statement echoed the defense his lawyers presented at trial,
portraying him as a peaceful dissident who shared with bin Laden a
desire for reform in their native Saudi Arabia but turned away as
bin Laden grew increasingly radicalized.
"My goal was reform, not rebellion," al-Fawwaz said on Friday.
But Kaplan rejected that assertion as "untruthful," saying al-Fawwaz
clearly supported bin Laden's threats against Americans.
In a statement, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said, "Fawwaz
conspired with a murderous regime, and the result was a horrific
toll of terror and death."
Al-Fawwaz was arrested in London in 1998 and extradited in 2012
following a legal battle. He is the 10th defendant convicted in
connection with the bombings, according to prosecutors.
The case is U.S. v. al-Fawwaz, U.S. District Court for the Southern
District of New York, No. 98-1023.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe and Dan Grebler)
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