Sunday, 03-December-2006
Almotamar Net - TWO young Australian men detained as suspected members of a terrorist group were released in Yemen at the weekend after authorities decreed they had no case to answer.

Tom Allard - TWO young Australian men detained as suspected members of a terrorist group were released in Yemen at the weekend after authorities decreed they had no case to answer.

Accused of links to al-Qaeda and arms smuggling to the latest jihadist hot spot � Somalia � Mohammed and Abdullah Ayub were arrested on October 17 in the Yemeni capital of Sanaa, with another Australian, Marek Samulski. Mr Samulski, still in custody, was visited by Australian officials at the weekend.

The Ayub brothers are sons of Abdul Rahim Ayub, the man credited with setting up a Jemaah Islamiah cell in Australia in the 1990s. Five other men, including a Dane, a Briton and a German, were also arrested in what lawyers for the Australian men insisted was a general round-up of foreigners.

A Department of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman last night confirmed the Ayubs had been "released unconditionally".

Sydney lawyer Adam Houda, who acts for them, said the two men would be staying in Yemen, where they have been for more than two years, to continue their religious and language studies.

He said their release had left "eggs on the faces" of those who had made "poisonous allegations" about them.

The mother of the men, Rabiah Hutchison, a Mudgee-born convert to Islam who divorced Ayub and worked in the Taliban-era Afghanistan as a midwife and nurse, remains in Sydney after ASIO confiscated her passport, although she says she does not know why. Ms Hutchison said her sons � Abdullah, 21, and Mohammed, 19 � were innocent and were being unfairly vilified.

Source: The Age
This story was printed at: Tuesday, 09-June-2026 Time: 09:49 AM
Original story link: http://www.almotamar.net/en/1679.htm