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Islamists suspected of spying for Israel wait behind bars for the verdict at a courtroom in Sanaa on Monday.
(Reuters)
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Last update - 15:37 23/03/2009
Islamist sentenced to death in Yemen after offering to spy for Israel
By News Agencies
Tags: Israel News, Yemen, Espionage 

A Yemeni court sentenced an Islamist to death and handed down jail sentences against two others on Monday after convicting them of seeking to work for Israeli intelligence services.

Yemen, like many other Arab countries, has no relations with Israel and regards it as an enemy state.

"
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This is an unfair ruling," shouted Bassam al-Haidari when judge Mohsen Elwan sentenced him to death. Elwan ruled that Ali al-Mahfal be imprisoned for five years and Ammar al-Raimi for three years.

"The court has found that the evidence is reliable and all the charges in the prosecution report are correct," Elwan said.

The three were charged with emailing the office of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, identifying himself as a mujahid, a holy warrior, and offered to work for Israeli intelligence.

An official, who spoke Monday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press, said the Israelis responded positively. An Israeli security official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, declined to comment on the matter.

The three men, who deny the charges and say they were fabricated by an officer they had a dispute with, said they will appeal against the ruling.

"I seek God's help against you," Raimi told the judge.

The men, arrested last year, were convicted of demanding money from the embassies of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

The were accused in January of claiming, in the name of a group calling itself Islamic Jihad, an attack on the U.S. embassy that killed 19 people in September.

The twin suicide car bombings on the U.S. embassy, later claimed by al-Qaeda in Yemen, were the biggest militant operation in the poor Arab state since the attacks on the French tanker Limburg in 2002 and the U.S. warship Cole in 2000.

The government joined the U.S.-led war against terrorism following the September 11 attacks in 2001. It has jailed scores of militants in connection with bombings of Western targets and clashes with the authorities, but is still viewed in the West as a haven for Islamist militants.


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