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French Arrest Two Men in Sept. 11 Probe
Las Vegas Sun ^ | June 05, 2003 at 16:57:10 PDT | PIERRE-ANTOINE SOUCHARD -- AP

Posted on 06/05/2003 5:03:10 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach

PARIS (AP) - French authorities investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks in the United States have arrested two men - a Moroccan and a German believed to be a top al-Qaida recruiter - in the last two days at the Paris airport, judicial officials said Thursday.

The officials said they believe there's a link between the two suspects.

On Sunday, Karim Mehdi, a 34-year-old Moroccan, was taken into custody at Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris, the officials said on condition of anonymity. He had arrived from Germany and planned to leave to the French island of La Reunion off southeastern Africa.

Mehdi allegedly was planning a terror attack against a tourist complex on the island, the officials said. Further details about the site or timing of the attack were not immediately available.

On Monday, Christian Ganczarski was apprehended at the airport and was to appear before an anti-terrorism judge in the coming days, the officials said on condition of anonymity.

Ganczarski also allegedly had links to the April 2002 suicide bombing of a historic synagogue on Tunisia's tourist island of Djerba that killed 21 people, including 14 German tourists, the officials said.

German authorities allowed Ganczarski to leave the country in December because there was not sufficient evidence to arrest him, German officials said at the time.

Ganczarski was being investigated for suspected membership in a terrorist group after being traced as the recipient of an intercepted phone call from Nizar Naouar, the leading suspect in the Djerba bombing who is believed to have died in the suicide mission.

Mehdi's arrest was the first in France since French anti-terrorism judges opened an investigation into the Sept. 11 attacks just a few weeks after they took place in 2001.

He appeared before a judge Thursday and was placed under investigation - one step short of being officially charged - for alleged connection with a terrorist enterprise, officials said. He was being held in custody.

The judicial sources said they believe Mehdi had links to a suspected cell of the al-Qaida terror network operating out of Hamburg, Germany.

Three of the suicide hijackers who seized control of commercial airliners for the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington - including the alleged ringleader, Mohammed Atta - allegedly had ties to the Hamburg cell.

A Hamburg court in February convicted Mounir el Motassadeq, also a Moroccan, and sentenced him to 15 years in prison for providing support for the Hamburg cell. He was the first Sept. 11 suspect anywhere in the world to be convicted for his part in the attacks.

Another Moroccan man, Abdelghani Mzoudi, is to go on trial in August in Hamburg on the same charges.

Three weeks ago, a dozen suicide bombers - all believed to be Moroccan - killed 31 other people in five nearly simultaneous attacks in Morocco's largest city, Casablanca.

On Tuesday, authorities arrested a Frenchman, 28-year-old Robert Antoine-Pierre, in connection with the Casablanca attacks. He was the first non-Moroccan implicated in the attacks, which targeted Jewish and Spanish sites and a major hotel.

Investigators have been probing the relationship between the Casablanca bombers and extremist groups like Salafia Jihadia, which is suspected of ties to al-Qaida.

A week earlier, a group of suicide bombers killed 26 people - including nine Americans - in foreign housing complexes in the Saudi capital, Riyadh. Intelligence officials believe al-Qaida may have been behind the attacks.

FBI Director Robert Mueller planned to meet Friday with Moroccan King Mohammed VI as part of a swing through the region to discuss the global fight against terrorism.

--




TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; alqaedagermany; captured; christianganczarski; djerba; hamburg; karimmehdi; sept112001; tunisia; waronterror

1 posted on 06/05/2003 5:03:10 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Christian Carncarski? Did this
guy have blond hair and blue eyes?
2 posted on 06/05/2003 5:14:24 PM PDT by Springman
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To: Springman
I don't know but very likely!

Found this :

___________________________________________________________

_From the National Review

___________________________________________________________

With the Iraqi regime defeated and military victory near at hand, the United States and it allies are positioned to leverage greater cooperation in the war on terror from key Arab states, chief among them Saudi Arabia.

For all its rhetoric, and its limited actions, Saudi Arabia remains part of the problem of international terrorism, not the answer.

To be sure, Saudi Arabia has made several contributions to the war on terror — albeit limited and intermittent. In one instance, Saudi agents reportedly infiltrated two domestic al Qaeda cells, leading to the arrest last June of over 75 al Qaeda members of several nationalities, including Saudis. Saudi security services have thwarted terror attacks targeting Western interests in the Kingdom.

Still, even those counterterror efforts in which the Saudis do engage are inconsistent. While limited operations have been conducted in the tactical realm of preventing near term attacks on Saudi soil, the Saudis have proved far less cooperative in critical strategic areas such as combating terror financing or assisting international terrorism investigations. The actions the Saudis claim to have already implemented amount to little more than window dressing, when what is needed is concrete and concerted action.

If the Saudis acted on the four following issues, they would make a significant contribution to the reinvigorated counterterror offensive to follow the removal of Saddam and liberation of Iraq. Critically, the only question is whether the Saudis are willing to take such action; they are certainly capable. These are actions the Saudi regime is capable of taking, and should therefore be expected and held accountable to implement.

Action in these areas is the yardstick by which the West should measure Saudi cooperation in the war on terror:

1. Assist International Terror Investigations. Saudi officials are not only insufficiently cooperative in terrorism investigations, they have obstructed several recent investigations into key terrorism suspects.

Violating a U.S. Grand Jury subpoena order and State Department regulations, Saudi diplomats in Washington secreted Maha Hafeez Marri out of the U.S. to Saudi Arabia in November 2002. Marri’s husband, Ali Marri, is charged with lying to FBI officials about phone calls he made in the months following the 9/11 attacks to Mustapha al-Hawsawi, the money-man who financed the hijackers on behalf of, and was later captured with, Khaled Shaikh Mohammad.

That same month, Saudi officials also granted a controversial visa to Christian Ganczarski, a Polish convert to Islam living in Germany. Ganczarski used the visa to elude German authorities investigating him for his role in the Djerba synagogue bombing. The Djerba suicide bomber called two people in the moments before the attack, Ganczarski and Khaled Shaikh Mohammad.

In another case, Saudi officials ignored repeated requests for assistance from German officials investigating convicted al Qaeda member Mounir Motasadeq. The Saudis refused to assist German investigators to determine why the 9/11 accomplice had the business card of Muhammad Fakihi, the chief of the Saudi embassy’s Islamic Affairs Branch. Fakihi has since been tied to the leader of another al Qaeda cell plotting attacks in Germany. Four days after the cell members were arrested, Fakihi left Germany and disappeared. Only now, almost a year after German officials first requested their cooperation, are Saudi officials seeking Fakihi for questioning.

2. Regulate charitable and humanitarian organizations. Despite promises to regulate charities, require foreign-ministry permits for charities operating internationally, and enforce standard accounting and auditing procedures, these promises remain unfulfilled.

Meanwhile, several Saudi charities — including the al Haramain Islamic Foundation and the International Islamic Relief Organization, among others — continue to finance international terrorism. For example, captured al Qaeda terrorist Omar al Farouq admitted to receiving funds for attacks in Southeast Asia via the al Haramain foundation, just one of several factors leading the Australian Parliament to call for an inquiry into possible Saudi links to the October 13 Bali bombings.

Similarly, the list of 20 Saudi al Qaeda financiers — described by bin Laden as “the Golden Chain” — must also be dealt with. Those members of the Saudi elite proactively financing international terrorism — sometimes through charities, sometimes more directly — must be reined in.

While the Saudis have yet to take significant action to curb such activity, they certainly are capable of doing so. Indeed, Sheik Aqeel abdul-aziz Al-Aqeel, Director of al Haramain, admitted in a recent interview with the Australian Broadcasting Company that “the Saudi government asked us to stop supporting Chechnya fighters recently and we stopped that one year ago.”

3. Establish a Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU). In a highly publicized Washington press conference on December 3, 2002, Saudi spokesman Adel al Jubeir committed Riyadh to setting up a Saudi FIU to collect real time intelligence on suspicious financial activity. FIUs share that information with both their own domestic law enforcement agencies as well as the other 69 FIUs around the world cooperating under the auspices of the Egmont Group. Additonally, Jubeir extended an invitation to the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering (FATF) to come into Saudi Arabia and provide an “outside assessment” of Saudi initiatives. To date, the Saudi FIU — if it indeed exists — has yet to report suspicious financial activity to the international community. Nor have FATF experts been invited to the Kingdom to review Saudi efforts to block money laundering and terror financing.

4. Delegitimize terror. While the Saudis unveiled a “Saudi peace plan” at the Arab League summit in Beirut in March 2002, the regime has yet to denounce Palestinian terrorism or prevent Saudis from funding Palestinian terrorist groups. Indeed, government sponsored telethons have raised considerable sums for Palestinian terrorist groups opposed to peace. In the final analysis, the “main source of financing” for Hamas comes from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states, according to terrorism scholar Magnus Ranstrop.

The Saudis can no longer be allowed to finance international terrorism on the one hand, and portray themselves as “victim[s] of terrorism for the last 40 years.” They must now choose sides in the war on terror. By leveraging the momentum of victory in Iraq, the coalition can help the Saudis come to the right conclusion. Indeed, in liberating Iraq the coalition demonstrated its ability to apply the same zero tolerance for terror to states as it has to individuals and groups.

If Riyadh is truly an ally in the war on terror, it should show it by acting on these four agenda items.

Matthew Levitt is a senior fellow in terrorism studies at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

3 posted on 06/05/2003 5:33:25 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (Where is Saddam? and his Weapons of Mass Destruction?)
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To: Springman
From the text:

That same month, Saudi officials also granted a controversial visa to Christian Ganczarski, a Polish convert to Islam living in Germany.

4 posted on 06/05/2003 5:34:16 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach (Where is Saddam? and his Weapons of Mass Destruction?)
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
A French probe?!?!

...sounds obscene.

5 posted on 06/05/2003 5:35:43 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Looks like Dubya told Chirac to get with the program; or else!
6 posted on 06/05/2003 5:36:33 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: connectthedots
I was hoping Chirac was one of the people arrested!
7 posted on 06/05/2003 5:46:56 PM PDT by graycamel
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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Thanks for the info. It just sounds strange an Polish convert to Islam, they can't eat Polish sausage, Polish ham, ect.

BTW I think his talents were wasted, he should have been sent
over here, could have blended in very well and stage an attack.
Well thank God he didn't.
8 posted on 06/06/2003 4:10:55 PM PDT by Springman
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