Hani al Sibai | Hani al Sibai | al Maqrizi Center | Afghanistan-Pak-India | 20051027 | Link | |||
Hani al Sibai | Gamaa Islamiya | Britain | 20050921 | Link |
Afghanistan-Pak-India |
Islamists Dismiss Reports of Bin Laden's Death |
2005-10-27 |
![]() Repeated appearance by al Qaedaâs second in command Ayman al Zawahiri, on his own, in the last few months, added weight to the rumors, especially as bin Laden has not appeared in any video for over a year. Muntasser al Zayat, a lawyer defending Islamist extremists in Egypt, told Asharq al Awsat, in a telephone conversation, that security precautions precluded bin Laden from communicating with the media, as al Zawahiri has in the past, adding that âsecurity concerns require the men not to be in the same locationâ. Less stringent security measures meant al Zawahiri was able to record and smuggle videotaped messages while fears for his life precluded bin Laden from appearing in public, especially as he might have had to change his physical appearance to avoid capture, al Zayat indicated. âNo one can predict where bin Laden and al Zawahiri are currently living. I believe they are in the least expected placeâ, he said. For his part, Hani al Sibai, head of al Maqrizi Center in London, indicated that, in case bin Laden dies, al Qaeda would announce a new leadership was in place and publicly back his successor as it had done when âthe leaders of Afghan Arab fighters in the Caucusâ Mohammad Atef, also known as Abu Hafs, died in Qandahar in 2001. Al Sibai indicated that al Zawahiri acknowledged the arrests of Abu Faraj al Libbi and Khaled Sheikh Mohammed and Ramzi bin al Shibah so that, âif the reports on the death of bin Laden were true, al Qaeda would publicly announce his death.â âIn my opinion, the disappearance of bin Laden after his last videotaped message in December 2004 is aimed at encouraging the US military to stop pursuing himâ, he added. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
UN Hariri Murder Report Unravels Abu Adas Mystery |
2005-10-23 |
![]() A previously unknown group, Victory and Jihad in Greater Syria, âAl Nusra wal Jihad fi Bilad al Shamâ claimed responsibility for the murder and announced in a videotaped statement that the ex- Prime Minister had received the punishment he deserved. Shown on the Qatar-based channel, the tape featured the confessions of Ahmad Abu Adas, who alleged he murdered Hariri, accusing him of being a Saudi agent, in revenge for those killed in the Kingdom. UN investigator Detlev Mehlis indicated, in his report released on Friday, âAbu Adas was in Syria and forced to read out the statement at a military checkpoint after which he was killed. The tape was sent to Beirut the morning of February 14 th 2004 and a civilian with past criminal convictions was asked to accompany a security officer to the Hamra district in the capital where they were to leave the videotape and then contact Ghassan bin Jeddo, al Jazeeraâs chief in Lebanon to inform him about the its location.â In a chapter entitled Ahmad Abu Adas, the report reconstructed the Palestinian Islamistsâ final hours. It also described how, around 2:11pm on the day of the assassination, an hour after Hariri was killed, an unknown individual telephone Leila Bassam, the Reuters bureau chief in Lebanon and spoke to her in a non-Lebanese accentâ. Fundamentalists in London who analyzed the videotape told Asharq al Awsat, âThe message by Abu Adas broadcast on al Jazeera is highly suspicious.â Dr, Hani al Sibai, an Egyptian Islamist and Director of al Maqrizi Center in London said âThe appearance of Abu Adas barefaced and the language he used were suspect.â In his view, the intelligence services implicated in the murder hid behind the âeasy targetâ, which is al Qaeda and organizations that are linked to it, in an attempt âto blame Islamistsâ for the murder. Watching Abus Adas on screen, âI felt he was being held captive and made to read a message prepared by someone elseâ, al Sibai recalled, adding that he had never heard of the organization which allegedly masterminded the attack on Hariri. In her testimony to the UN probe, Bassam said an unknown individual contacted her at the office and dictating the following message: âWe, the Victory and Jihad in Greater Syria organization, claim responsibility for murdering Rafik Hariri. His killing should serve as an example to others.â For his part, Bin Jeddo remembered receiving four separate telephone calls on February 14 th, from the same unknown group announcing it carried out the assassination. The first caller, who had an âAfrican, or Afghan, or Pakistani accent claimed he was from the al Nusra wal Jihad group which killed Haririâ, according to bin Jeddo. Sometime later, the al Jazeera offices received a second call from another member of the organization who spoke fluent Arabic and explained to the staff how to retrieve the videotape with information on the attack. Ben Jeddo said he sent a colleague to a building in Beirut where he found an envelope with the tape and a written detailed explanation of the assassination inside. Following repeated calls from members of the group inquiring why the Qatar based satellite channel had not yet broadcast the statement, the channel showed Abu Adas claiming responsibility for the assassination of the former Lebanese Prime Minister. Subsequent investigation revealed that Sheikh Ahmad Abdul Al, current leader of the fundamentalist al Ahbash group, which has a large following in Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, received a telephone call from the presidential palace requesting information on Abu Adas. UN investigators revealed they had evidence suggesting âThe Syrian Presidentâs brother-in-law, Asef Shawkat, took part in forcing Abu Adas to record the videotape, two weeks prior to Haririâs assassination.â The report added that the killing occurred over ground and no proof existed that Abu Adas drove the car which carried the explosives, adding that the Palestinian Islamist was used to mislead the investigation and that the tape was sent from Damascus to Major General Jamil Sayyed in Beirut before being left in the Hamra district and broadcast on the afternoon of February 14 th 2005. âAbu Adas who left his home in Beirut in January for Damascus was killed in the Syrian capitalâ, the report indicated. Al Qaeda organization in Syria âal Qaeda fi Bilad al Shamâ denied in a statement broadcast on the internet the involvement of any Islamist militant groups in the assassination of Hariri. âThe attempt to blame salafi or jihadist organizations aims at fostering conflictâ, the message said, blaming instead the Syrian or Lebanese security services for the murder. |
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Britain |
Egyptian Fundamentalist Fears Deportation |
2005-09-21 |
![]() Al Sibai was convicted in absentia and sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labor in âthe returnees from Albaniaâ case as one of the leading suspects. He had come to London with his family in 1994 and sought asylum. In 1998, the Egyptian Islamist was detained during Operation Challenge involving the Metropolitan police anti terrorist branch, Special Branch and MI5 targeting the leadership of âIslamic Jihadâ, in the wake of US embassy bombings in Africa. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Islamists doubt reports on bin Ladenâs involvement in Afghan fighting |
2005-08-27 |
![]() On his part, the Egyptian Islamist Dr. Hani al Sibai, the director of the al Maqrizi centre in London, questioned the news of an injury to bin Laden or his involvement in combat as this would have made him vulnerable to being caught. He said, âHis followers would never accept this.â Given the secrecy surrounding the whereabouts of bin Laden, taking part in military operation and overseeing a group of fighters would be very risky especially as prisoners might reveal the location of their leader. Al Sibai indicated the head of al Qaeda, bin Laden and Egyptian Ayman al Zawahiri were unlikely to reside in the same lcoation due to the hightened security measures adopted by the group to ensure its leaders remain alive. |
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