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Birmingham men jailed over terrorism links

Three Birmingham men have been jailed for sending equipment to terrorists fighting British soldiers on the Afghan and Pakistan border.

Clockwise from top left: Abdul Raheem, Mohammed Nadim, Shabir Mohammed and Shahid Ali.

Mohammed Nadim, 29, was jailed for three years and Shahid Ali, 34, and Shabir Mohammed, 30, were sent to prison for two years and three months.

They pleaded guilty at the Old Bailey to supplying equipment such as computer parts, mobile phones and camping gear, to terrorists abroad.

A fourth man, Abdul Raheem, 32, pleaded guilty to failing to disclose information on terrorism and was jailed for a year.

The four were members of a terror cell run by Parviz Khan who was jailed for life last year for plotting to kidnap and behead a soldier.

They helped Khan sent four shipments containing 86 boxes of supplies between April 2006 and February 2007.

But Nadim, of Denville Crescent, Bordesley Green; Ali, of Bromford Lane, Ward End; and Mohammed, of Benton Road, Sparkhill, claimed to have known nothing of Khan's plot to kill a soldier in the UK.

Raheem, of Johnson Close, Ward End, knew about the shipments but failed to tip off the police.

He was formerly called Antonio Edmondson and was a new convert to Islam. He was said to be eager to be accepted into the community in Birmingham.

The judge, Mr Calvert-Smith, said the 2005 earthquake which killed thousands in Pakistan was used as a cover to export the goods. He told the men: "It is tragic for you and your families that you chose to get involved in this operation.

"The leader was a fanatic with a strong personality and good force of persuasion which he must have exerted on you."

Khan admitted involvement in the preparation and delivery of the equipment and had gone to Pakistan to supervise their distribution, said Duncan Atkinson, prosecuting.

He said Khan masterminded the operation involving the defendants and others from his home in Foxton Road, Birmingham.

Raheem visited him there in September 2006 and showed solidarity in secretly

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