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For any copyright, please send me a message. Two British terror suspects accused of being involved in the execution of Western hostages, as well as Salford aid worker Alan Henning, have denied all charges against them in a US court. El Shafee Elsheikh, 32, and Alexanda Kotey, 36, are accused of beheading hostages for the so-called Islamic State in Syria. Both are accused of being involved in the executions of four American citizens, as well as British and Japanese nationals. The two men, who grew up in London, are said to have been part of a four-strong terror cell dubbed The Beatles because of their English accents. Prosecutors say the cell was made up of ringleader Mohammed Emwazi - known as Jihadi John - Aine Davis, Kotey and Elsheikh. It was allegedly responsible for the killings of a number of Western and Japanese captives, including Britons Alan Henning and David Haines. They are also accused of involvement in the killings of four American hostages - journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff and aid workers Peter Kassig and Kayla Mueller. Emwazi, aka Jihadi John, was killed in a US air strike in 2015, while Davis was later jailed in Turkey. Kotey and Elsheikh were transferred to the US on Wednesday, after being captured by Syrian Democratic Forces in January 2018 and held in Iraq by the US military since October 2019. At a brief hearing in the US District Court in Alexandria, Virginia, on Friday, the two men pleaded not guilty to the eight charges against them via video link from jail and requested a trial by jury. The case is due back in court on January 15 to set a trial date. Prosecutor Dennis Fitzpatrick said some of the evidence in the case is classified, which will require some pre-trial hearings to be closed to the public to determine how that evidence will be handled. The charges against them include hostage-taking resulting in death and providing material support to terrorists - five of the eight counts carry mandatory sentences of life imprisonment. Many of the executions Kotey and Elsheikh were allegedly involved in were filmed and beamed around the world in graphic detail by so-called Islamic State. Cab driver-turned-aid worker Mr Henning, 47, from Salford, was beheaded in 2014 after being captured by extremists in Syria. Former aircraft engineer and humanitarian Mr Haines, 44, from Perth in Scotland, was also beheaded in Syria that same year after being held prisoner for 18 months. The defendants are accused of forcing captives to witness murders, subjecting them to mock executions, shocks via electric taser and beatings among other brutal acts. Under American law, the pair may be held liable for the "foreseeable acts of their co-conspirators" that took place during th
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