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Afghanistan/South Asia
Farooqi was the link between top al-Qaeda and local hard boyz
2004-09-30
THE top Pakistani militant killed in a weekend raid had taken direct orders from the feared Libyan al-Qaeda operative Abu Faraj Farj, a senior police commander said today. "Amjad Farooqi was the main link between Pakistani militants and al-Qaeda's Abu Farj," Syed Kamal Shah, the police chief of southern Sindh province, told AFP. Farooqi was shot dead during a raid by paramilitary forces in a rural Sindh town on Sunday morning, ending a nationwide manhunt for the man accused of masterminding plots under al-Qaeda's direction to assassinate President Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz. Farj is described by Pakistani intelligence agencies as al-Qaeda's new operations chief and he has been linked to the two assassination attempts against Musharraf last December. "Farooqi has been taking orders from Farj and was operating as per directives from him," Shah said.

Investigators also say Farooqi, 30, took part in the kidnap of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl and recruited the trio of Arab men who beheaded him in January 2002. Farooqi was indicted over Pearl's death but had eluded capture. Pakistani security forces are hoping that 13 militants arrested since the raid will lead them to Farj. "It's difficult to say at this stage that we would be able to get Farj, but interrogators are questioning Farooqi's two accomplices in order to break the network," Mr Shah said.
"Sgt, I think I'll use the number seven truncheon today."
"Personally, sir, I like the number six, balances nicely in the hand, it does, sir."
"Ah, but the fine Moroccan leather of the number seven is such a delight to the hand!"
Two militants who had been hiding with Farooqi were captured in the Sunday raid and another 11 have been arrested since the weekend. "Those arrested as a result of the interrogation of the two accomplices may also help the security agencies to avert further acts of terrorism," the police chief said. "It's one of the biggest breakthroughs in the ongoing war on terror." The 13 detainees, all Pakistanis, include a suspect in the May 2002 suicide car bomb attack which killed 11 French naval technicians outside Karachi's Sheraton hotel. Mr Shah said further arrests were likely. Farooqi was considered al-Qaeda's key recruiter and operator in Pakistan.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#4  Doesn't seem to be working Grunter. :)
Posted by: Shipman   2004-09-30 5:31:00 PM  

#3  Testing...
Posted by: Grunter   2004-09-30 4:02:40 PM  

#2  heart attack wasn't in the cards for poor Farooooooq
Posted by: Frank G   2004-09-30 10:19:03 AM  

#1  Captured the two underlings but kiled the top dog? Guess he had too many ISI names in his mental rolodex.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2004-09-30 10:06:49 AM  

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