Advice and Reform CommitteeThe Advice and Reform Committee or Advice and Reformation Committee (ARC) (Arabic: هيئة النصيحة والاصلاح) was the British office of what is now called al-Qaeda from 1994 until the arrest of Khalid al-Fawwaz in 1998.[1] A U.S. grand jury indictment[2] of Osama bin Laden, al-Fawwaz, and 19 others reads in part
and in part
Bin Laden wrote several documents which he signed on behalf of ARC: his 1994 statement about Saudi Grand Mufti Abdul-Aziz bin Baz, and a 1995 reaction to the arrest of some clerics in Saudi Arabia. According to Ahmad Thomson, a London-based attorney testifying for the defense at the trial of Khaled al-Fawwaz, the Advice and Reform Committee was designed to promote “peaceful and constructive reform” in Saudi Arabia. However, prosecutors described the organization as an Al Qaeda front.[3] Bin Laden may have formed the organization with the intent to seek asylum in the United Kingdom after King Fahd of Saudi Arabia revoked his citizenship, but the British Home Office rapidly issued an exclusion order barring him from entering the country.[4] References
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