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German Arrested in Riyadh for Alleged Al-Qaeda Link
The Arab News ^

Posted on 04/05/2003 4:03:06 PM PST by BurbankKarl

German Arrested in Riyadh for Alleged Al-Qaeda Link M. Ghazanfar Ali Khan, Arab News Staff

RIYADH, 6 April 2003 — The German Foreign Office has confirmed the detention of a German national in Saudi Arabia. He was allegedly involved in a terrorist attack on a Tunisian synagogue last year which killed 21 people, including 14 German tourists.

The German national has been identified as Christian Ganczarski, a Muslim sometimes known as Abu Ibrahim. Ganczarski, 36, who is also wanted in the US, was arrested in the Kingdom after Germany provided information to the Saudi government.

The suspect was arrested and questioned by German authorities before coming to Saudi Arabia.

The German Embassy in Riyadh declined to comment when contacted by Arab News.

Germany and Saudi Arabia currently have no extradition treaty, but local sources said that the Kingdom and Germany were cooperating on this issue. The German federal prosecutor’s office said it did not have sufficient evidence to hold the suspect. It also said that it had no legal grounds to block him from going to Saudi Arabia.

In the meantime, US authorities are said to be interested in seeking Ganczarski’s extradition to the United States for interrogation about his knowledge of Osama Bin Laden. Ganczarski is believed to have been a frequent guest of Bin Laden at a residential complex of the Al-Qaeda ringleader in Afghanistan.

A report published in “Der Spiegel,” the German weekly magazine, said that the Saudi government had not responded to German demands to allow its investigators to continue their probe in Riyadh. The Kingdom and Germany have cooperated with each other generally, and relations between the two countries are very cordial, with Riyadh and Berlin sharing common approaches on regional and international issues.

Germany is home to over 2.3 million Muslims out of a total of 14 million in Western Europe.

About seven other Westerners are currently in detention in Saudi Arabia. They have allegedly been involved in a series of bombings linked to alcohol smuggling during the last three years in which at least one Westerner was killed and several others injured.

In another development, Interior Minister Prince Naif disclosed yesterday that Syria had handed over to the Kingdom 10 Saudis who fought in Afghanistan.

“The men are currently in the Kingdom and have been allowed to meet with their relatives,” Prince Naif told reporters.

He did not say when they were handed over, why they had been in Syria or if they were being detained.

The minister denied the presence of Al-Qaeda “sleeping cells” in the Kingdom. He said there were “some people who share the ideology” of Bin Laden but added that their number was decreasing.

He has also announced previously that 90 out of 253 Al-Qaeda suspects had been sent to court on charges of being members of the terror network.


TOPICS: Germany; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abuibrahim; alqaeda; alqaedagermany; arrests; bombing; bombings; christianganczarski; ganczarski; germany; ibrahim; saudi; saudiarabia; saudis; synagoguebombings; synagogueplots; tunisia

1 posted on 04/05/2003 4:03:06 PM PST by BurbankKarl
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To: BurbankKarl
He's German? The last name sounds Polish.
2 posted on 04/05/2003 4:14:15 PM PST by Catspaw
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To: Catspaw
Polish last names? Lotsa those in Germany. What cracks me up is the guy's first name.
3 posted on 04/05/2003 4:21:29 PM PST by TheMole
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To: Catspaw
He's a Polish-born Muslim convert.

Big snip from another article:

- "France quizzes Tunisia bomb suspect," BBC online, 8 june 2003 France has placed a German citizen under investigation over last year's bomb attack on a Tunisian synagogue. Christian Ganczarski was arrested on Monday at Charles de Gaulle airport near Paris and is believed by investigators to have links to the Islamic militant network al-Qaeda.

A second man, Moroccan national Karim Mehdi, was taken into custody at the same airport on Sunday on suspicion of links to militants behind the 11 September attacks on New York and Washington.

Mr Mehdi, 34, has already been placed under investigation by the French authorities - the final step before criminal charges can be brought.

Intelligence agencies have long suspected Mr Ganczarski, a 36-year-old Polish-born Muslim convert, of al-Qaeda connections, the BBC's David Bamford reports.

Suspicions

Mr Ganczarski was detained twice before - in Germany and Saudi Arabia - but each time was released through lack of evidence. He has admitted knowing the suspected suicide bomber in Tunisia though denied involvement in the attack. French officials say he also admits knowing Mr Mehdi who was detained as he was about to board a plane for the French territory of Reunion in the Indian Ocean.

Investigators are working to a theory that he may have been involved in plans to attack tourist centres, an allegation denied by Mr Mehdi.

- "France quizzes Tunisia bomb suspect," BBC online, 8 june 2003

4 posted on 01/28/2004 7:43:01 PM PST by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
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