Two Egyptian nationals appeared in a London court Monday in connection with the bombings last year of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Ibrahim Hussein Eidarous, 42, and Adil Muhammad Abdul al-Majid Bari, 39, were both arrested in London on Sunday on U.S. extradition warrants.
The men are suspected of links with Saudi militant Osama bin Laden, who claimed responsibility for the attacks that killed 220 people and wounded another 4,000 others.
Arvinder Sambi, appearing in court for Britain's Crown Prosecution Service on behalf of the US government, said the two men's fingerprints were found on faxes claiming responsibility for the attacks.
Sambi told the court that police found copies of the faxes at the offices of The Advice and Reform Council, allegedly a front for the terrorist organization Al Qade (Arabic for The Leadership) in west Kilburn, London. Eidarous was described as a former army officer and Bari as a lawyer who now helps fellow Egyptian dissidents.
Two Egyptian nationals appeared in a London court Monday in connection with the bombings last year of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Ibrahim Hussein Eidarous, 42, and Adil Muhammad Abdul al-Majid Bari, 39, were both arrested in London on Sunday on U.S. extradition warrants.
The men are suspected of links with Saudi militant Osama bin Laden, who claimed responsibility for the attacks that killed 220 people and wounded another 4,000 others.
Arvinder Sambi, appearing in court for Britain's Crown Prosecution Service on behalf of the US government, said the two men's fingerprints were found on faxes claiming responsibility for the attacks.
Sambi told the court that police found copies of the faxes at the offices of The Advice and Reform Council, allegedly a front for the terrorist organization Al Qade (Arabic for The Leadership) in west Kilburn, London. Eidarous was described as a former army officer and Bari as a lawyer who now helps fellow Egyptian dissidents.
Two Egyptian nationals appeared in a London court Monday in connection with the bombings last year of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Ibrahim Hussein Eidarous, 42, and Adil Muhammad Abdul al-Majid Bari, 39, were both arrested in London on Sunday on U.S. extradition warrants.
The men are suspected of links with Saudi militant Osama bin Laden, who claimed responsibility for the attacks that killed 220 people and wounded another 4,000 others.
Arvinder Sambi, appearing in court for Britain's Crown Prosecution Service on behalf of the US government, said the two men's fingerprints were found on faxes claiming responsibility for the attacks.
Sambi told the court that police found copies of the faxes at the offices of The Advice and Reform Council, allegedly a front for the terrorist organization Al Qade (Arabic for The Leadership) in west Kilburn, London. Eidarous was described as a former army officer and Bari as a lawyer who now helps fellow Egyptian dissidents.