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Home Front: WoT
Feds arrest another thinks-he-is suicide bomber heading to Capitol building
2012-02-17
Authorities have nabbed a Virginia man allegedly on his way to the U.S. Capitol for what he thought would be a suicide kaboom on one of the nation's most symbolic landmarks, Fox News has learned. 

The man, a Moroccan citizen who has lived in the United States for a dozen years, was identified as Amine El Khalifi, 29, according to a congressional source. He was nabbed following a lengthy investigation by the FBI, initiated after he expressed interest in conducting an attack. He came onto the radar screen in early December after he told an undercover agent about an earlier plan to bomb a northern Virginia building. 

The suspect allegedly weighed hitting various targets ranging from a military installation to synagogues to a Washington restaurant before settling on the Capitol. 

The man thought undercover FBI agents assisting him in his plot were associates of Al Qaeda. He purchased bomb materials including jackets, nails and glue in preparation for an attack. He even conducted a test explosives demonstration in a quarry.  

When he was nabbed Friday in Washington, he was carrying with him a vest supposedly packed with explosives, but the material inside was not actually dangerous, Fox News was told. 

A short time earlier, he had been praying at a mosque in the Washington area. His destination was Capitol Hill. 

The public was never in danger, as he had been under constant surveillance for some time, officials said. The FBI provided the suspect with a disabled gun during their ongoing operation, Fox News has learned. 

In a statement that did not get into the details of the alleged plot, the U.S. Capitol Police said the suspect was "closely and carefully monitored." Capitol Police confirmed the suspect was nabbed on Friday. 

"At no time was the public or congressional community in any danger," the department said. 

A senior source involved with law enforcement at the Capitol also told Fox News the investigation was "all very controlled." The source said the U.S. Capitol Police was involved with the FBI and other agencies in tracking the suspect "not more than a year."

An arrest usually indicates charges have been filed in some form, but it's unclear when or how charges would have been filed in this case. It's also unclear if the suspect will be appearing in court Friday. In similar past cases, suspects have made their initial court appearance within hours of their arrest. 

Sites in Washington have long been a target for terrorists, especially self-radicalized Death Eaters caught in FBI stings. 

In September, a Massachusetts man was nabbed for allegedly plotting to fly bomb-laden model planes into the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol. FBI agents claiming to be associates of Al Qaeda provided 26-year-old Rezwan Ferdaus with what he thought was kaboom for the remote-controlled planes. 

Nearly a year earlier, a Virginia man was nabbed for trying to help Al Qaeda plan multiple bombings against Washington's Metrorail system. For months, 34-year-old Farooque Ahmed of Ashburn, Va., had been meeting and discussing "jihad" with individuals he thought were affiliated with Al Qaeda, but in fact he was meeting with FBI agents. 

In the past year alone, at least 20 people have been nabbed in the United States on terrorism-related charges, according to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. 

"Most of the arrests" have involved "lone wolves," radicalized online and able to use the Internet to build bombs, FBI Director Robert Mueller told the Senate committee last month.
Update from NBC News as of 4:02 om ET:
The suspect, said by law enforcement officials to originally have come from Morocco and staying in the country illegally, was arrested around noon Friday, blocks from the Capitol, after he received what he thought was a vest containing explosives.


Agents are now conducting searches in Alexandria, Va., where the suspect has been living. FBI officials said El Khalifi has in the United States for the last 12 years illegally, after entering the country legally at age 16 but then overstaying his visa.  He was unemployed, the AP reports, and is not believed to have ties to al-Quaida.

At this time, investigators believe that El Khalifi was acting alone.

El Khalifi will appear in federal court this afternoon.
Update from CBS News as of 5:27 pm ET:
WASHINGTON (CBSDC/AP) — A northern Virginia landlord says he thought a Moroccan man arrested in an alleged suicide bombing plot in Washington was suspicious and called police a year and a half ago.

Frank Dynda said Friday that a woman who leased an apartment in his Arlington building apparently married Amine El Khalifi and then moved out. He says when Dynda told El Khalifi to leave, he said he had a right to stay and threatened to beat Dynda up.

Dynda says he thought El Khalifi was making bombs, but police told him to leave the man alone. Dynda had El Khalifi evicted in 2010.

On a related note, authorities also executed a search warrant on a residence in Arlington Friday afternoon. It is unclear whether El Khalifi lived at the house. FBI and Arlington County Police were seen speaking with two men at the location.
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Home Front: WoT
Pakistani-American sentenced for plotting US subway bombings
2011-04-13
[Dawn] A Pak-American man was sentenced Monday to 23 years in prison for plotting attacks on subway stations around the US capital with people he believed were Al-Qaeda affiliates.

Farooque Ahmed, a naturalised US citizen who lived in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, admitted photographing stations in 2010 to plan simultaneous kabooms.

The 35-year-old pleaded guilty to charges of attempting to provide material support to a designated terrorist organisation and collecting information to assist in planning a terrorist attack, US officials said.

A federal judge also sentenced Ahmed to 50 years of supervised release after prison, as part of a plea agreement between Ahmed's lawyers and prosecutors.

Ahmed was caught in a sting operation by US authorities, who said that "at no time was the public in danger during this investigation and that the FBI was aware of Ahmed's activities from before the alleged attempt began and closely monitored his activities until his arrest."

Ahmed was jugged in October 2010. Authorities said he had studied security operations at subway stations, took photographs, and provided diagrams to the fake Al-Qaeda affiliates.

Ahmed also "provided suggestions as to where explosives should be placed on trains in Metrorail stations in Arlington to kill the most people in simultaneous attacks planned for 2011," the US Department of Justice said in a statement.
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Home Front: WoT
Suspect in subway terror sting pleads not guilty
2010-11-10
[Dawn] A Pak-born US citizen has pleaded not guilty to charges that he attempted to help al-Qaeda bomb the Washington subway system.
"No, no! Certainly not!"
Thirty-four-year-old Farooque Ahmed was arraigned Tuesday. His jury trial was scheduled for April. Ahmed was jugged last month in a federal sting. Authorities say he plotted with people he thought were al-Qaeda members to conduct bombings at D.C. Metrorail stations.

Authorities say the people he thought were al-Qaeda members were actually undercover law enforcement operatives.
Don'tcha just hate it when that happens?
Court documents released Tuesday show that authorities seized a pistol, a shotgun and two rifles from Ahmed's Ashburn home as well as a recording of a lecture from radical holy man Anwar al-Awlaki.
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Home Front: WoT
Hearing for DC subway terror suspect expected
2010-10-29
Prosecutors are expected to argue Friday afternoon that Farooque Ahmed should remain jailed until his trial on charges of plotting to attack DC subway stations.

Government authorities raised the risk of flight in an affidavit filed Thursday to get approval to search Ahmed's home, car, bank account and computer.

He had planned to fly to Saudi Arabia within the next two weeks, making him a possible flight risk, according to reports. A FBI agent said that Ahmed told undercover agents that he planned to travel next month for the Hajj.
Update:
DC terror suspect to be held without bail
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Home Front: WoT
Man charged in bomb plot on US capital's subway
2010-10-28
[Dawn] A Pak-born man was jugged Wednesday and charged with trying to help people he believed were al-Qaeda operatives in planning to bomb subway stations around the US capital, the FBI said.

The FBI said the public was never in danger because its agents were aware of the man's activities before the alleged planning took place and monitored him throughout.

Farooque Ahmed, 34, a pretend U.S. citizen, had been indicted under seal Tuesday and the indictment was released Wednesday. He was charged with attempting to provide material support to a designated terrorist organization, collecting information to assist in planning a terrorist attack on a transit facility, and attempting to provide material support to carry out multiple bombings to cause mass casualties at Washington-area metro stations.

Ahmed lives a suburb outside Washington.

Federal investigators said starting in April Ahmed met several times with people he believed were al-Qaeda bad guyz.

During one of those meetings, investigators said, he agreed to watch and photograph a hotel in Washington and a metro station in suburban Arlington, Virginia. He also was accused of participating in surveillance, recording video of a subway station in Arlington on four different occasions, and agreeing to get security information about two stations.

Investigators said in a Sept. 28 meeting he gave diagrams of Arlington metro stations to a person he thought was part of al-Qaeda and gave suggestions about where to put explosives on trains to kill the most people in simultaneous attacks planned for 2011.

"Today's case underscores the need for continued vigilance against terrorist threats and demonstrates how the government can neutralize such threats before they come to fruition," Assistant Attorney General for National Security David Kris said in a statement after Ahmed's arrest.

"Farooque Ahmed is accused of plotting with individuals he believed were cut-throats to bomb our transit system, but a coordinated law enforcement and intelligence effort was able to thwart his plans."
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Home Front: WoT
VA Man Arrested for Plotting DC Attacks
2010-10-27

A Pakistani-born U.S. citizen was arrested Wednesday on charges of planning bombings at Metrorail stations in the Washington, D.C., area after an FBI sting operation, the Justice Department announced.

A Pakistani-born U.S. citizen was arrested Wednesday on charges of planning bombings at Metrorail stations in the Washington, D.C., area after an FBI sting operation, the Justice Department announces.

"Farooque Ahmed, 34, of Ashburn, Va., was arrested today for attempting to assist others whom he believed to be members of al-Qaida," the department said in a statement.

A grand jury returned an indictment against Ahmed on Tuesday, "charging him with attempting to provide material support to a designated terrorist organization, collecting information to assist in planning a terrorist attack on a transit facility, and attempting to provide material support to help carry out multiple bombings," the department added.
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India-Pakistan
Islamist voices rise on Pakistani campuses
2006-03-23
LAHORE, PAKISTAN - Like many students at Punjab University, Mohammed Abid Faran worries about living costs almost as much as his studies. To save rupees, he counts on an Islamist student organization, Islami Jamiat Talaba (IJT), which keeps prices at the university hostel artificially low. "Here a cup of tea costs three rupees," Mr. Faran, an engineering student, says. "Outside it costs six."
Three-rupee tea or your soul, Mo. Choose carefully.
But Faran worries that IJT dictates not only the price of tea but the proper comportment of Muslim students in this cosmopolitan city as well. "We are studying, and they are saying we should protest, without regard if we are busy and want to go or not," he says, referring to a recent demonstration on campus over the controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. "Why should they put pressure on us?"

Such conflicted feelings underscore a heated debate on Pakistani campuses over the influence of groups like IJT. Islamist student unions are battling for the hearts and minds of young Muslims - receiving a boost from a growing student conservatism as well as IJT's ability to fill in gaps left by the poor funding of education here. Some 23,000 students attend Punjab University, a place that the government hopes will foster the values of "enlightened moderation." The leafy grounds echo campuses around the world: young men and women stroll together down shaded lanes; a young woman poses giddily for a picture. But some faculty members say that their tolerant and liberal viewpoints are facing an increasingly tough challenge. And students say they've seen IJT activists beat others whose public behavior they deem unacceptable. In one example highlighted by the local press, IJT activists allegedly beat a newly married couple whom they mistakenly thought were flirting in public.

IJT activists deny such charges. "This is false propaganda. There is not one incident in which IJT workers beat students," says Nasurallah Khan Goraya, president of IJT, which is linked to the Jamaat Islami, a popular Islamist party with seats in the National Assembly.
Let's be honest here, shall we? IJT is the muttawa and dawa wing of JI, whose members are perfectly happy to pick up a crowbar and bash some heads.
Members of IJT, who number some 3,000 nationally, say they promote Islamic values not only by policing student behavior but by helping needy students. Pakistan spends less than $600 per student per year on higher education, proportionally less than comparable South Asian countries, according to comparative studies. Its spending on overall public education, the lowest in the region, declined to 1.8 percent of GDP in 2002-03 from 2.6 percent of GDP in 1990. The US has proposed $87 million in aid for higher education in Pakistan between 2002 and 2007.
Just between you and me, I don't want one US penny being spent on education in WakiPakiLand.
IJT leaders say they do not receive any money directly from Jamaat Islami. The bulk of their funding, they say, comes from private donations from former members both in Pakistan and abroad and supports campaignssuch as aiding schools in earthquake-affected areas and holding book fairs. "We have only an ideological link with Jamaat Islami," Mr. Goraya says. "We do not depend on them."
Sure. Yah. Yew betcha.
Mohammad Farooque Ahmed, a law student at Punjab Law College, says he was drawn to IJT's methods of instilling discipline and knowledge, and that peace and democracy are cornerstone values. "We motivate our workers to pay attention to their studies," he says, displaying a book where IJT students record daily activities, noting how often they've prayed and read the Koran. It is presented to a supervisor at week's end.
Are those gold stars or bloodstains in the margins?
As Muslims, IJT members say they believe that Pakistan should be governed by Islamic sharia law, but say they do not support the use of force. "We want to make a democratic system," says Shabir Ahmed, an IJT leader. "If people don't like Islam, we will not compel them."
"After the bruises heal, the kufrs join quite willingly."
Critics, however, say that IJT's strong-arm tactics at Punjab expose their ideological agenda. Four years ago, IJT spearheaded a movement for a walled-off cafeteria for women, points out professor Mujahid Ali Mansoori. "They would not allow a single boy and girl to sit alone," he says, adding, "When I was a student 30 years ago, it was a lot more liberal." Professor Mansoori and other faculty say the incident is but one example of IJT's growing power, despite the fact that IJT is technically banned from campuses, the result of a 1992 Supreme Court ruling aimed at ending decades of political violence at universities. And, they say, its influence reaches into the ranks of senior administration. Officials say they maintain the ban on IJT, but that the group benefits from influence gained in the 1970s and '80s. Still, they say, that influence is petering out. Muhammed Naeem Khan, the university registrar, says he is doing what he can to support that trend. "Whenever I have to exert force, I do," he says, adding, "I don't want to be fanatical in my approach. I don't chase every poster."

Dr. Khan says that the school recently expelled several IJT activists for engaging in political activities, including setting up booths to attract students. But IJT posters are virtually the only wall adornments in one dorm - and virtually everywhere else on campus.
"Don't be stupid, be a smarty. Come and join the JI party!"
Afzaal Ahmed, though not a member, says students are compelled by religion to use force if they see improper behavior in public. "If you see some evil taking place, you must use power to stop it," he says, noting that he's seen IJT students attack others. Mr. Ahmed says, though, that IJT should not function as an unauthorized religious police force. IJT's overall impact has been "pernicious," says Shaista Sirajuddin, chairwoman of the English department. "It's really destroyed the academic environment. It's erosive," she says. She cites incidents where IJT and supporters have tried - unsuccessfully - to remove books from the syllabus. "A small number of us are fighting a rear-guard battle against the closing of one's mind." But she says that students still graduate with a sense of tolerance, and that she and others place their hope in students like Sarah Ahmed. "People at this age are mature enough to know what's right and what is wrong," Ms. Ahmed says. "You can't impose your subjective viewpoint on them."
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