Egyptian gets $27 million for Mohammed's arrest tip

Not bad chunk of coin…

WASHINGTON (CNN) – An Egyptian radical will get $27 million as a reward for giving the United States information that led authorities to alleged September 11, 2001, mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, government sources said Wednesday.

The sources, confirming a story previously reported in a British paper and in Newsweek, said the unnamed Egyptian was captured during a raid in Quetta, Pakistan, last month. The Egyptian was described as an al Qaeda foot soldier.

Officials said he not only claimed the $25 million award that was being offered by the U.S. government for information that led to Mohammed’s arrest, but also demanded $2 million more to help cover the costs of his family moving to Great Britain. He is being paid the money, the sources said.

Re: Egyptian gets $27 million for Mohammed's arrest tip

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by underthedome: *
also demanded $2 million more to help cover the costs of his family moving to Great Britain
[/QUOTE]

$2 million more?! He going to buy a Learjet time share to ship his fam to the UK??? That aside, congrats to the guy. Enjoy the 25mil mullah!

What load of BS, unnamed al quada soldier, haha!

Published on Tuesday, March 11, 2003 by Reuters

Pakistan Accused of Staging Bin Laden Aide Arrest
by Simon Denyer

http://commondreams.org/headlines03/0311-01.htm

ISLAMABAD - A grainy video purporting to show the arrest of two al Qaeda
leaders has done little to deflect accusations that Pakistan may have staged
this month’s raid to give it leeway to abstain in a U.N. vote on an Iraq war.

On Monday, the powerful military Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) held an
unprecedented news conference to show foreign journalists what it said were
images of a March 1 raid in Rawalpindi that netted al Qaeda kingpin Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed.

But few of journalists present were convinced the video – which did not show
Mohammed’s face nor any sign of a struggle – was genuine. Many said it looked
like a crude reconstruction.

On Tuesday, a former ISI chief said he believed Mohammed was actually arrested
some time ago in a different city.

“They are trying to cover up,” Lieutenant-General Hamid Gul told Reuters. “I
believe he was arrested before, probably in Karachi.”

One intelligence source said Mohammed had been arrested three days before, from
the Tench Batta suburb of Rawalpindi.

Rumors of Mohammed’s arrest had circulated in Pakistan for months, but were
consistently denied.

Gul said news of the arrest appeared to have been leaked at a critical time,
just as Pakistan was facing huge U.S. pressure to support a U.N. Security
Council vote authorizing war on Iraq.

On Monday night, a senior ruling party official told Reuters the government,
under massive domestic pressure to oppose war on a fellow Muslim state, had
decided to abstain in the vote, news that shocked British and American
diplomats in Islamabad.

The ISI earlier said it had called its first news conference in Pakistan’s
history to counter criticism in the Western media that it had not done enough
in the war on terror.

Gul said the raid may have been staged – and news of the arrest leaked – for
the same reason, against the backdrop of the U.N. vote.

Gul, who ran the ISI from 1987 to 1989, said the raid was conducted in far too
casual a fashion to have been real, with police failing to properly surround or
secure the house in a middle-class Rawalpindi suburb.

RELATIVES, NEIGHBORS CONTRADICT AUTHORITIES

Relatives of Ahmed Quddus, the son of the house owner, have maintained he was
the only man in the house at the time of the raid. Neighbors said they heard no
sound of gunfire – contradicting the official account, which maintains that
Mohammed shot one intelligence agent in the foot with an AK-47 rifle.

Within hours, news of the raid and arrest was leaked to foreign news agencies,
something Gul also found incredible.

“He has to be questioned, before you present him to the public eye,” he said.
“You don’t present news like that.”

In the video, an ISI officer is seen briefing half a dozen agents about the
impending raid – in English, as opposed to Pakistan’s Urdu mother tongue.

Officials explained this was a reconstruction of the original Urdu briefing,
but said the rest of the video was genuine.

But many journalists were unconvinced as a calm cameraman shone his lights on
the raiding party, and followed agents as they casually broke into the compound
and the house, and walked up the stairs.

There was no sign of a struggle – or of any urgency. The cameramen then
focused on the back and neck of the man officials said was Mohammed, before the
man was swiftly hooded.

The video has not been released to the media for broadcast.

Mohammed is identified by the United States as the mastermind of the September
11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. The ISI says the financier of the
attacks, Saudi national Ahmed al-Hawsawi, was also arrested in the same raid.

But one Pakistani source said al-Hawsawi had been picked up at least one month
before the announcement of his arrest, and that intelligence agents had voiced
delight at the time.

On Tuesday, Quddus was remanded in judicial custody for 14 days, and lawyers
said his trial could start this month on charges of possessing weapons,
resisting arrest and terrorism.

The intelligence source said Quddus’ family was suspected of having sent
Mohammed food, and Mohammed was said to have visited the house four or five
times.

Quddus is the son of an official in the Jamaat-e-Islami party, a key member of
a religious alliance that opposes the military-backed government and has
organized big street protests against war on Iraq.

Authorities say at least two other al Qaeda suspects have been arrested in
houses linked to Jamaat-e-Islami members, but Gul said the party could be the
victim of an official campaign to blacken their name.

“Jamaat has never had any contacts with the Arabs (al Qaeda),” said Gul. “They
are at loggerheads with U.S. policy…and at this stage it would be an
advantage to have them labeled as terrorists.”

Copyright 2003 Reuters Ltd