The laptop and pen drives seized from the arrested people also showed their extensive visit to websites that spoke about joining of terror modules and how to conduct reconnaissance and surveillance of individuals and important targets.
Among those arrested are Muthi-ur-Rahman Siddiqui, a journalist, Riyaz Ahmed Baihatti, a BCA graduate and salesman, Mohammed Yusuf Nalabund, also a salesman, Aijaz Ahmed Mirza, a software engineer at DRDO, Shoaib Ahmed Mirza alias Chotu, an MCA student, Obeidullah Imran Bahadur alias Sameer alias Imran, Mohammed Sadiq Lashkar alias Raju, Baba alias Mehaboob Bagalkote, Abdulla alias Abdul Hakim Jamadar, Dr Zafar Iqbal Sholapur and Wahid Hussein alias Sahil.
The magazine has been touted by many United States think tanks, as an effective tool of banned Al Qaeda terror group for recruiting youths without getting in physical contact with them.
According to US think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies, the Al Qaeda and its Associated Members recognised the importance of information and communication technology and has exploited it for training purposes.
It says that the magazine has provided instructions on topics such as "how to make a bomb in the kitchen of your Mom" and how to clean AK-47 besides other traditional propaganda pieces.
Parents and kin of the arrested youth have denied allegations levelled by the police and have also demanded an impartial probe to ascertain the truth. However, sources privy to the probe claimed that the youths arrested in Bangalore were inspired by the writings of the magazine and had contacted brother of Shahid Bilal, a Hyderabad resident killed in a gunfight at Karachi in Pakistan.
The sources said that at least four youths had expressed their desire to fight along the Al Qaeda cadres in Afghanistan, a proposal which was turned down by brother of Bilal, who is believed to be holed up in Saudi Arabia.
The youths had told the investigators that they were instructed to carry out some attacks in India before graduating to fight the American troops in Afghanistan, the sources claimed.
In this connection Mirza alias 'Chotu' had visited Pakistan and got arms training there and after returning he made others also learn some of the basics in arms training, the sources alleged.
As a result of the instructions from their handlers in Gulf, the youths had actually planned to kill one of the columnist working in the same newspaper where Siddiqui was working, the sourced alleged and also claimed that his movements had been followed closely.
The entire terror network was a result of extensive investigation by the Andhra Pradesh police and Central security agencies for last six months during which mobile phones and Internet activities of these people was monitored closely to gather as much as evidence against them.
"Police have so far seized from the suspects one foreign-made 7.65 mm pistol along with seven cartridges, 16 mobile phones, eight SIMs, four ATM cards, three pen drives, two laptops, a Hero Honda Splendor motorbike, a dagger, seven books on jihad, two maps of Chennai and one each of India and Iran, some Urdu paper clippings and Rs 1,500 in cash," Police Commissioner of Bangalore B G Jyothi Prakash Mirji had said.
Some of the members of this group have been arrested from Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh as well.