It is senior plaintiff Bo Bjerregaard from the Copenhagen West Region Police who, in his presentation of the case, reports on the names. One of them is Abdulkadir Cesur – he is also known as the “Car Washer from Bursa”.
Cesur was sentenced in a terror case from Sarajevo in Bosnia to six years and four months in prison. In the case, Cesur and a Swedish-Bosnian man were arrested in an apartment in Sarajevo, where there were both weapons and explosives.
According to the prosecution, there are many indications that the 23-year-old woman has been in contact with Cesur. For a survey of her phone has shown that in the fall of 2016 she got on a network called “AbdulDK”.
And here the case against the 23-year-old then draws threads to yet another terror case. For the network AbdulDK also appeared in what is called Dronesag.
In that case, a man, Faty Mohammed, was sentenced to four and a half years in prison. And just during the case, it emerged that Faty Mohammed had at one point used the AbdulDK network.
The two cases are also linked. In the way that the 23-year-old, in the opinion of the prosecution, has had a stressful chat with two sisters whose brother has been sentenced to eight years in prison in the drone case.
The police in Denmark want to get hold of Cesur. He is imprisoned in absentia and wanted internationally. The same is true of two other men who have also been mentioned at Thursday’s court hearing.
It concerns, firstly, Isaac Meyer, formerly known as Abdul Basit Abu-Lifa. He was sentenced by the Supreme Court to seven years in prison in a case called “The terror case from Glostrup”, which was a Danish offshoot of the Sarajevo case.
On the 23-year-old woman’s phone, the police have found an article about Abu-Lifa, and according to Bo Bjerregaard, there are also signs that the phone should have been used to look at a picture of him.
Among the names in Bjerregaard’s submission – one of the people with whom the 23-year-old has allegedly had contact – is also Danny Bak. He is also known as Abu Omar.
Bo Bjerregaard states that both Danny Bak and Abu-Lifa are internationally wanted by the Danish police. Both are believed to have joined Islamic State. But as far as Abu-Lifa is concerned, there are doubts as to whether he is still alive.
The woman’s sister has been convicted of trying to travel to Syria. The woman is accused of having tried to help her. In the sister’s case, another woman and two men were also convicted.
The woman denies guilt. She explains on Thursday that she has not been to Syria but stayed exclusively in Turkey and Egypt.
The case is expected to be settled in late August.
Source: The Nordic Page