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2RHPZ
06-25-2004, 03:20 AM
Hambali providing vital info on al-Qaeda ops in SEA

EXCLUSIVE
BY WONG CHUN WAI AND LOURDES CHARLES

KUALA LUMPUR: Hambali, once dubbed the face of terror in South-East Asia, is providing vital information to security agencies on the operations of Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda movement in the region.

It is learnt that the Indonesian preacher, who had plotted and carried out a militant campaign, has told his interrogators how al-Qaeda had funded the Jemaah Islamiah, the extremist group he headed that has been blamed for church bombings in Jakarta and the deadly 2002 Bali bomb blasts.

“He is talking but we want to know more,” said a regional security source who has been receiving periodic reports from the American interrogators.

However, security sources declined to reveal details of the funding as investigations were still in progress.

Regional security officials have remained tight-lipped over where the 40-year-old Hambali is being held since he was caught in August last year, but there are indications that he could possibly be at the Guantanamo Bay detention centre in Cuba.

Hambali, or Riduan Isamuddin, who was the brains behind the fanatical JI that has been accused of carrying out a series of church bombings in the Indonesian capital and the Bali blasts that killed over 200 people, is also said to have spoken about his meetings with Khalid Sheikh Mohamed, a brother-in-law of Osama.

Khalid, who has since been arrested, allegedly delivered money to Hambali to finance his JI operations.

The sources said that the Americans, who had yet to allow regional security forces to quiz Hambali, wanted to know how Hambali arranged for militants from Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and the Philippines to travel to Afghanistan via Pakistan.

“Hambali was said to have helped provide these extremists with forged documents purportedly for them to study religion in several madrasah in Pakistan,” a source said.

In Afghanistan and in the southern Philippines, these terrorists were given arms training before they embarked on their series of bombing campaigns in Indonesia and the Philippines.

The intelligence agencies also want to hear from Hambali whether training camps were set up in Indonesia for recruits in what were known as Camp Bushra and Camp Abubakar.

It is understood that the intelligence agencies were also trying to find out who the other key al-Qaeda leaders that Hambali had met and their roles.

Intelligence sources said the interrogation focused on Hambali’s tactical support, financial capabilities, cell network and associated organisations of JI in the region.

“The agencies are also keen to trace the JI’s links to the MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front) and the Abu Sayyaf in the Philippines,” a source said.

The source said this was vital as two of the JI’s most wanted men, Malaysians Dr Azahari Husin and Noordin Mohd Top, were still at large and posed a serious threat to the region.

It is learnt that authorities probing Hambali’s activities in the region recently seized several of his personal belongings, including photographs taken before his capture.

The Star managed to obtain a new photograph of Hambali who had used it to get a fake Spanish passport in his bid to elude the police dragnet.

Gone were the beard, spectacles and white skullcap he had used at the time of his arrest in Thailand last August. In the photograph, which has never been published, Hambali, known to be a master of disguise, is pictured wearing a Western-style jacket.

Not only did he change his hairstyle, he also changed his name to Daniel Suarez Naviera.

2RHPZ
06-25-2004, 03:21 AM
Elusive Azahari remains a big threat

KUALA LUMPUR: Hambali has been in detention for almost a year but Jemaah Islamiah bomb expert Dr Azahari Husin, the alleged mastermind of the Bali bomb blasts in 2002 that killed more than 200 people, remains elusive.

The former Universiti Teknologi Malaysia lecturer, known to be a bomb expert, and fellow Malaysian Noordin Mohd Top have, while on the run, taken over the leadership of the regional terrorist organisation that has links in several Asean countries.

With key operatives already arrested by regional security agencies, the two continue to keep ahead of the police dragnet that has been spread out for them.

Dr Azahari has acquired the reputation of one of the region’s most feared terrorists, after he engineered the Bali blasts and, most recently, the JW Marriott Hotel bombing in Jakarta in August last year that left 12 dead.

He was also said to have been responsible for the church bombings in Pekanbaru and Medan on Christmas Eve in 2000 and the blasts at the Atrium Plaza in Jakarta the same year.

Since the arrests of Hambali and JI’s alleged spiritual leader Abubakar Ba’asyir, the Malacca-born Azahari is said to have assumed the leadership of JI, which has links with Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda movement.

“With the arrest of Hambali and Abubakar Ba’asyir, these two Malaysians have moved up the ranks. The network has been crippled but it remains alive,” said an Indonesian official.

Security agency sources said their focus was to prevent the JI remnants from regrouping and adapting to the leadership changes following the arrest of key leaders in Indonesia –Imam Samudra, Amrozi and Ali Gufron Muchlas.

“The command structure might have scaled down, but the JI operatives remain a deadly threat. The situation in Indonesia is made more difficult because there are no laws to detain suspected terrorists without trial.

“The security agencies’ greatest fear is that the JI leaders, who are on the run, might launch a few attacks to prove that they are still alive and committed to their cause,” one source said.