Arabia | |
Slain terrorist identified as Baghdadi | |
2010-12-28 | |
The ministry said Baghdadi was killed on Friday while he was trying to cross the checkpoint south of Riyadh wearing a woman's abaya to hide his identity. The ministry said police were looking for Baghdadi because of his involvement in various crimes. "Baghdadi was associated with a 113-member terrorist cell," the ministry said, adding that Saudi security forces destroyed the cell in March. Suspects jugged in that operation included Haila Al-Qusayyer, a financier of terrorist activities. Baghdadi, a resident of Yemen, was killed while he was trying to run away from the Kingdom. Days before his death, he reportedly had stayed in a Jazan hotel and established contacts with people in the region. A young man who was accompanying Baghdadi has been jugged. He is a resident of Zahir district in Makkah. The 17-year-old was not carrying any identification at the time of his arrest except iqama copies of two Yemenis. Baghdadi had been training the young man for the last three months. He faces charges for abetting a wanted terrorist and providing him with logistics to run away from the country. Police at the checkpoint stopped the car in which the men were traveling. When police were checking the identity of the driver, a teenager, the other man who was wearing an abaya, came out and shot up police. "Security officers then shot the man dead," one source said, adding that no police officer was killed or injured in the incident. Meanwhile, ...back at the ranch... Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Asheikh called for dialogue with Al-Qaeda Orcs and similar vermin in order to change their thinking and ways. "Violence cannot be tackled with violence but through sound awareness programs. We should start this by inviting them for a dialogue," he said. Al-Asheikh urged security officers to keep a watch on Al-Qaeda's websites to follow their movements and know those who are associated with the network. The mufti said his call was directed not only at Orcs and similar vermin but also khateebs (prayer leaders) and holy mans. As many as 1,500 Orcs and similar vermin have backed down from their turban views as a result of counseling given to them by experts through the Internet. | |
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Arabia |
Saudi women played a marginal role in deviant group's activities |
2010-12-03 |
![]() The tasks of women snuffies in the earlier days were confined to assisting in logistic matters such as helping wanted beturbanned goons travel without attracting police attention in addition to offering moral support to them. Gradually some of them turned to terror recruiters, financiers and even a media relations officer like Bint Najd, who distributed terror propaganda online. Al-Qaeda started recruiting women in the Kingdom in 2004. The first known female terrorist was the wife of the Kingdom's Al-Qaeda chief Saleh Al-Oufi, who was killed in 2005. Many terror activists donned women's clothes and moved in women's company to cross police checkpoints undetected. Ali bin Abdul Rahman Al-Ghamdi, one of the 19 Al-Qaeda men wanted by the Interior Ministry in the past, used to travel between Madinah and Jeddah wearing abaya and in the company of women before he surrendered to Assistant Minister of Interior for Security Affairs Prince Muhammad bin Naif in 2003. His Moroccan wife was also with him. Wives of beturbanned goons used to accompany their husbands and help them go underground. Al-Oufi's wife hid his three children in a relative's house in Madinah after Al-Oufi's name figured in the ministry's list of bandidos published in 2003. She was caught in July 2004 when police raided a house in King Fahd district in Riyadh. Isa bin Saud Al-Oushi and Muejib Abu Ras Al-Dossary were killed in a police encounter in which three other beturbanned goons were maimed. It was also reported that police recovered the decapitated head of kidnapped American John Marshall from a cold storage within that house. Authorities also seized weapons from the house. Al-Oufi's wife and three children were released by order of Interior Minister Prince Naif and sent to her brother before her husband was killed in a confrontation in 2005. Wafa Al-Shehri is another notable Saudi female terrorist. She is wife of Saeed Al-Shehri, the second in command of Al-Qaeda in Yemen. Her association with Al-Qaeda started with her marriage to Abdul Rahman Al-Ghamdi, who was killed in a clash with police in Taif in 2004. Later, Wafa married former Guantanamo detainee Al-Shehri after fleeing to Yemen. Another Saudi woman in Al-Qaeda is Haila Al-Qusayyer, 47, the terror financier referred to by fellow beturbanned goons as Madame Al-Qaeda and Umm Al-Rabab. Al-Qusayyer had been wife to two Al-Qaeda beturbanned goons -- Abdul Kareem Al-Homaid and Muhammad Suleiman Al-Wakeel. Al-Wakeel was killed in a security operation following a botched attempt against an Interior Ministry building in 2004. Saeed Al-Shehri reportedly threatened to make several attacks and kidnaps in order to force the authorities to release Al-Qusayyer, who was captured by Saudi forces from the house of another wanted cut-thoat in Al-Khobaitiah district of Buraidah, Qassim province. Al-Shehri, who planned to make Al-Qusayyer his second wife, sent two cut-thoats, Yusuf Al-Shehri and Raed Al-Harbi, from Yemen to Buraidah to smuggle her to Yemen in October 2009. Both beturbanned goons met their end at a checkpoint in Jazan. Al-Qusayyer was noted for her fundraising skills, often collecting money from wealthy Saudis on the pretext of raising money for orphans and widows. Bint Najd was the media chief of Al-Qaeda in the Kingdom. She operated more than 800 online clubs and blogs to promote the orc ideology and carried pseudonyms such as Al-Asad Al-Muhajir (The Migrant Lion), Al-Ghariba (The Exotic), Bint Najd Al-Habibah (Najd's Beloved Daughter) and Al-Najm Al-Satie (The Glowing Star). She uploaded the orc websites with audio and video recordings and official statements of Al-Qaeda. Abdul Munim Al-Mushawweh, director of the online Al-Sakeenah (Tranquility) Campaign against virulent deviant preaching that has been credited for reducing the online presence of extremism in the Kingdom, said he used to debate with the advocates of orc ideologies, including Bint Najd, but she never listened to his advice and was eventually jugged. |
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