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Home  » News » A blow to Al Qaeda

A blow to Al Qaeda

By B Raman
July 30, 2004 17:40 IST
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On July 26, the Punjab police announced that following an exchange of fire lasting 14 hours at Islamnagar in Gujrat, a town  about 175 km (110 miles) southeast of the capital Islamabad the previous day,  they had arrested 13 people suspected of links with Al Qaeda. They included three women and six children.

The names of the four men arrested were given as Abdullah, Tanveer, Feroze and Saleem. One of them was described as a Pakistani national from Okara, while the others were said to be nationals of Kenya, Sudan and South Africa. One of the arrested women was described as an Afghan national and a 12-year-old girl as a Saudi national.

It was stated that the police received the tip-off which led to the raid and arrests from an employee of a courier service through which the inmates of the house, who had been living there for 45 days, were receiving mail from abroad.

The police claimed to have recovered two Kalashnikovs, chemicals, dollars, euros and two laptop computers from the hide-out. According to another version, following the interrogation of a suspected Al Qaeda member, who had been arrested earlier, the police had picked up Tanveer from a hotel on July 24 and he had led them to the hide-out.

The police also claimed that one of the women was wearing a suicide jacket filled with explosives.

On July 29, Pakistan's Interior Minister Faisal Saleh Hayat announced that two of the arrested persons had since then been identified as Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian national born in Zanzibar, who is wanted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and his Uzbek wife. He carried a reward of up to $25 million for his arrest. Hayat said they would be handed over to the FBI after interrogation by the Pakistani agencies.

Ahmed Ghailani had been indicted in the southern district of New York on December 16, 1998, for his alleged involvement in the August 7, 1998, bombings of the US embassies in Dar-es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya.

Addressing a press conference at Washington DC on May 26, John Ashcroft, the US attorney general, had said: 'Credible intelligence from multiple sources indicates that Al Qaeda plans to attempt an attack on the United States in the next few months.This disturbing intelligence indicates Al Qaeda's specific intention to hit the United States hard. After the March 11 attack in Madrid, Spain, an Al Qaeda spokesman had announced that 90 percent of the arrangements for an attack in the United States were complete.'

An FBI bulletin issued subsequently said that public statements by Al Qaeda leaders suggested that plans for a attack on the US were nearly complete, and that any of several upcoming high-profile events --such as the recently concluded  G-8 Summit in Sea Island, Georgia, the national political conventions in Boston (which ended Thursday) and New York, and the November presidential election -- were possible targets.

'The face of Al Qaeda may be changing,' the bulletin said. 'It is possible Al Qaeda will attempt to infiltrate young Middle Eastern extremists into America, as they did prior to September 11.' At the press conference, which was also attended by FBI Director Robert Mueller, they distributed photographs of seven people who, they alleged, were associated with Al Qaeda.

'They all are sought in connection with the possible terrorist threats in the United States. They all pose a clear and present danger to America. They all should be considered armed and dangerous,' said Ashcroft.

Of these, six had figured in earlier FBI bulletins, but the seventh -- Adam Gadahn, an American convert to Islam -- figured for the first time. He was described as a close friend of Abu Zubaidah, a top Al Qaeda operative who is presently in US custody. According to Ashcroft, he had attended a training camp in Afghanistan and worked in the past as an English translator for Al Qaeda. 

Terrorism: India's unending war  

Of the seven named in the bulletin, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed and Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani were said to be involved in the Al Qaeda bombings of US embassies in East Africa in 1998. They are listed among the 22 most-wanted terrorists. The other five had been placed under the category 'seeking information,' meaning the FBI sought more information on them, but had no evidence so far of their

involvement in terrorism. The particulars of the seven persons figuring in the FBI bulletin are as follows:
 

Adnan G el Shukrijumah: A Saudi native who reportedly left the Miami area for Morocco in May 2001. He is suspected of being a leader of a terrorism cell or an organiser similar to Mohammed Atta, who was involved in the 9/11 terrorist strikes. Khalid Sheikh Mohammad was reported to have referred to him in his interrogation. FBI officials said he may be carrying passports from Saudi Arabia, Trinidad and Canada. According to them, El Shukrijumah, who was born in 1975, is of particular interest because of his familiarity with the United States, his ability to use fake documents and his fluency in English.

Aafia Siddiqui: Born in Pakistan in 1972, she was described by FBI Director Robert Mueller as an Al Qaeda operative and facilitator. Her name also reportedly figured in Khalid Sheikh Mohammad's interrogation report. She fled Boston last year, and the FBI believes she is in Pakistan, but this has been denied by the Pakistani authorities.She received a degree in biology from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1995 and wrote a doctoral thesis on neurological sciences in 2001 at Brandeis University. Her husband, Dr Amjad Mohammed Khan, is also wanted for questioning.

Fazul Abdullah Mohammed: Born between 1972 and 1974 in the Comoros Republic in the Indian Ocean, he is described by the FBI as Al Qaeda's ringleader in eastern Africa. He has been indicted in the US in the 1998 Al Qaeda bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The FBI reportedly suspects he may be hiding in Kenya or Somalia.

Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani: Born between 1970 and 1974 in Tanzania, he also goes by the names Foopie, Fupi and Ahmed the Tanzanian.

Amer el-Maati: Born in Kuwait in 1966, he is wanted by the FBI for questioning about possible Al Qaeda links. 

Abderraouf Jdey: Born in Tunisia in 1966, Jdey obtained Canadian citizenship in 1995; his last known address was in Montreal. He was among five men who allegedly left suicide messages on videotapes recovered in Afghanistan at the home of Mohammed Atef, said to be Osama bin Laden's military chief, who was killed in a US air strike in 2001. Jdey also goes by the names Farouq Al-Tunisi and Abd Al Rauf bin Al-Habib bin Yousef Al-Jiddi. 

Adam Yahiye Gadahn: A 25-year-old US citizen who is also known as Adam Pearlman. Reportedly grew up on a California goat ranch.

This is the sixth arrest of a top Al Qaeda or Al Qaeda allied operative from major towns of Pakistan since March 2002. Three were arrested from towns in the Punjab province -- Abu Zubaidah in Faislabad, Khalid Sheikh Mohammad in Rawalpindi, the twin town of Islamabad, where the army's general headquarters are located, and Ghailani in Gujrat -- and three were arrested in Karachi -- Ramzi Binalshibh, Walid bin Attash and Hambali's brother.

Three -- Abu Zubaidah, Hambali's brother and Ghailani -- had been given shelter by the Lashkar-e-Tayiba and the remaining three by the Jamaat-e-Islami. 

Pak terror camps still exist: Armitage 

There has so far been not a single arrest of any top Al Qaeda operative from the tribal areas near the Afghan border. Bin Laden had also reportedly been given shelter in the Binori madrassa of Karachi till August 2002. His present whereabouts are not known, if he is still alive, but one should not be surprised if he is also living in one of the towns of Pakistan and not in the remote tribal areas, as often claimed by Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's military dictator, and as believed by the US.

A perusal of the report of the US National Commission, which had enquired into the 9/11 terrorist strikes in the US and which contains some details of the interrogation of Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, Abu Zubaidah and others, indicates that the main hideouts of Al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan before 9/11 were in Karachi and Quetta. Islamabad, the capital, also figures. Abu Zubaidah was reported to have run a guest house there in 1999.

 

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B Raman