January-August 1998:
Saudi Businessman Pays Money to Al-Qaeda Front
SAUDI ARABIAN businessman Yassin al-Qadi pays US$1.25 million from an account in Geneva to a company called MARAM, an ISTANBUL-based terrorism front founded by al-Qaeda chief financial officer Mamdouh Mahmud Salim (see November 1996-September 1998). The transfer is not direct, but is made through an unidentified person the US later says is an al-Qaeda operative.
Writing in 2004, the Wall Street Journal will call this THE STRONGEST DOCUMENTED LINK TO DATE BETWEEN THE TERROR ORGANIZATION AND SAUDI FINANCIERS. HOWEVER, lawyers for al-Qadi, who the US will designate a terrorism financier after 9/11 (see October 12, 2001), will say that the money is not used to buy arms, but is spent on low-cost housing at a religious education facility.
The final recipient is said to be the Al Imam University in Sanaa, YEMEN, whose alumni include, for example, AMERICAN TALIBAN John Walker Lindh. The universitys rector is Sheikh Abdul Mejid al-Zindani, who fought alongside Osama bin Laden in the anti-Soviet jihad, heads the MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD in YEMEN, and, according to a memo obtained by the US Justice Department, discussed with bin Laden the use of charities in Pakistan as a front for terrorist attacks. [Wall Street Journal, 4/2/2004]
The Saudi rich are the untouchables.