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Arrested Italian Cell
Sheds Light
On Bin Laden’s European Network
By Leo
Sisti and Maud
Beelman
(Oct. 3, 2001) On a cold winter
night last January, on the outskirts of Milan, Italian anti-terrorist
police intercepted a frantic call between two suspected Osama Bin Laden
operatives. “They have arrested our brothers ... half of the group,”
the caller said. “They have found the arms warehouse in Germany.”
That call, monitored in a cell
phone wiretap, and subsequent other intercepts led to the arrest three
months later of Essid Sami Ben Khemais, a 33-year-old Tunisian, and five
others in Italy on charges of conspiracy, trafficking in arms and
explosives, and using false documents.
Milan prosecutor Stefano
Dambruoso is expected to complete his investigation in the case in the
coming weeks and ask a judge to try those arrested, along with two others
– a Belgian of Tunisian descent and an Iraqi living in Germany – for a
conspiracy that authorities say links alleged Bin Laden loyalists in
Italy, Britain, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Spain and France.
Since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon, outside
Washington, D.C., dozens of men suspected of having links to Bin Laden’s
al Qaeda network have been detained in Germany, France, Spain, Belgium,
Britain and the Netherlands. The extent of that network remains unclear.
But a 100-page Italian
investigative report, obtained by the Center for Public Integrity’s
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, tells a stunning
story of cooperation among suspected Bin Laden cells in Europe and
includes chilling wiretaps among the “brothers.”
In one intercepted conversation,
Ben Khemais, Mehdi Kammoun, 33, and two others, all now jailed in Italy,
boasted about past achievements in Chechnya, the breakaway region of
Russia where Bin Laden loyalists are believed to be active. “First we
studied the structure (of a building) … and then with the plastic …
BOOM. … The building collapsed,” the report quoted Kammoun (codename
“Khaled”) as saying. “A fire broke out and so God’s enemies were
buried and burned.”
In another conversation recorded
by Italy’s antiterrorist agency, known as Digos, Ben Khemais discussed
with five other men at his apartment the different types of materials used
in bomb-making, including plastic explosives and an unspecified
“drug.”
“I’d like to learn how to use
the drug and see the effect on someone breathing it,” Ben Khemais,
identified by his nom de guerre “Saber,” said in the March 13
conversation, according to the report. “But the formula is in the hands
of a Libyan ... a chemical professor ... . They have created a way to
combine the fumes (of the drug) with the explosive. ... It’s easy, but I
don’t know how to make it.”
Complicated web of relationships
The Italian investigative report,
dated April 3, lays out the complicated web of relationships among the
suspected al Qaeda operatives and identifies Ben Khemais and Tarek
Maaroufi, a naturalized Belgian of Tunisian descent, as being key figures
in Bin Laden’s European alliance. It was Maaroufi whom Ben Khemais
called weeks after the raid in Germany last December, warning him, “you
need to cover yourself, you know how!”
Dambruoso has issued a warrant
for Maaroufi’s arrest and hopes to have him brought to Italy to stand
trial. Media reports in Brussels say a man named Tarek Maaroufi,
identified as a naturalized Belgian of Tunisian origin, was convicted in
Belgium in the mid-1990s for his involvement in an Algerian terrorist
group and later questioned in connection with the 1991 murder of
Belgium’s former deputy prime minister.
U.S. intelligence also believes
Maaroufi was involved in a planned attack on the U.S. Embassy in Rome that
prompted the evacuation of the mission on Jan. 5, 2001, Dambruoso told the
Italian news agency Ansa.
Maaroufi flew to Milan on Sept.
15, 2000, and from the airport called a cell phone number used by Ben
Kehmais, who arrived two minutes later to pick him up, the report said.
Italian authorities tailed the two as they drove to Milan’s Cultural
Islamic Institute, whose former director was Anwar Shaaban, an Egyptian
who was investigated by Milan prosecutors before being killed in 1995
during the Bosnian war. The report called the institute “a substantial
crossroad” for Egyptian terrorists.
Late last year, U.S. intelligence
told Italian authorities that a man using the alias, Umar al Muhajer, was
“joining a group of three Islamic extremists who were linked to the
Osama Bin Laden organization and, from Afghanistan, were planning vague
actions against American targets in Italy,” the Italian report said.
U.S. intelligence also provided Italian authorities with a cell phone
number which, along with the alias, was later traced to Ben Khemais,
according to the report.
In the April 5 predawn raid on
Ben Khemais’ apartment in Gallarate, outside Milan, Digos agents found
at least 30 cell phone cards, most cloned from the accounts of unwitting
Italians, and approximately 40 videocassettes showing training scenes in
Afghanistan and battle scenes from Chechnya.
In a July 2000 raid on Ben
Khemais’ apartment, during an earlier immigrant smuggling investigation,
police came across a man with a photocopy of a Yemeni passport in the name
of Nassim Abdulqader Ahmed al Sakkaf. Not an unknown name, al Sakkaf had
been arrested in Ottawa, Canada, in 1997, for using a fake passport. In
May 2000, he was jailed in Germany on similar charges. And on Sept. 19,
2000, 8.46 million lire (US $4,000) was wired through Western Union to his
accounts by Ben Khemais, the report said.
Al Sakkaf was detained in Jordan
on Nov. 1, 2000, for illegally entering the country and also for his
connections with mujahedeen in Chechnya, the report said. Jordanian
authorities later determined his real name was Fahid Mahdi Ahmad Hamdan al
Hassan al Shakri, a Saudi national linked to a prominent member of the
“Jamaat al Islamiya” terror organization. That group’s spiritual
leader, Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, was convicted in the United States on
terrorist conspiracy charges and allegedly was the mastermind behind the
1993 bombing of the World Trade Center.
Ben Khemais nominally was
chairman of a cooperative called “Work Service srl,” a company which
provides office-cleaning services, as well as maintenance for gardens and
parks, the report said. But Digos agents suspect that the company, which
was raided together with other apartments Ben Khemais frequented, was just
a “smokescreen” to cover the real activity of the Italian terrorist
cell.
Ben Khemais moved to Milan in
March 1998 after spending two years training in Afghanistan to recruit
people to bring to one of four Afghan training camps for Islamic fighters,
where Bin Laden's organization teaches bombmaking, disguise, sabotage,
kidnapping, and hijacking of trains, buses and planes.
According to the report, the
“guerrilla candidates,” once recruited in Europe and provided with
false passports, were assembled in Geneva, where a Tunisian, identified in
the report as Taher Mestayser, arranged their travel. From Switzerland,
they were sent to Pakistan, where they were picked up at the Afghan border
and brought to a camp in Khost, south of Kabul. At the end of their
training, the report said, the “mujahedeen,” or holy warriors,
returned to Europe ready for jihad.
While running the Italian
terrorist cell, Ben Khemais was in direct contact with similar groups in
Germany, Britain and Belgium, the report said.
Terror networks in Europe
In summer 2000, two Islamic
terrorist networks were becoming very active in Europe: one led by a
Tunisian, identified as Seifallah ben Hassine, Ben Khemais’ boss in the
European cell, and the second by an Algerian in London, identified as
“Abu Doha” and the “doctor,” the report explained. The report said
nothing about Ben Hassine’s whereabouts. Haydar Abu Doha is in custody
in London, where U.S. authorities are seeking his extradition on charges
he was a key figure in Bin Laden’s network and one of the plotters to
bomb Los Angeles International Airport on New Year’s Eve 1999. Abu Doha
also was implicated by U.S. intelligence in the planned attack on the
American Embassy in Rome, the Italian report said.
The two networks supported the
activity of the Salafist Group for Call and Combat, a militant offshoot of
the Armed Islamic Group (known by its French initials GIA), which was
opposed to the Algerian government and responsible for subway bombings and
hijackings in France. However, by autumn 2000 in Europe, the report said,
“the Algerian situation was becoming less important in favor of a new
project sponsored by Osama Bin Laden: the setting up of a sort of
‘Islamic International,’ active under the name ‘International Front
Against Jews and Crusaders.’”
The Italian report, highlighting
the labyrinthian ties among the suspected al Qaeda operatives, noted that
during a raid on the Vancouver apartment of Ahmed Ressam, the Algerian
loyalist of Bin Laden’s who was convicted in the plot to blow up the Los
Angeles airport, Canadian investigators found two key telephone numbers.
One belonged to Abu Doha in London and the other to a Bin Laden operative
in Peshawar, Pakistan, who ran a residence for mujahedeen training in
Afghanistan. The report also said Italian authorities had intercepted a
series of cell phone calls, placed by Mehdi Kammoun, one of the men
arrested with Ben Khemais in April outside Milan. Between 12:43 a.m. and
7:08 p.m. on Dec. 3, 2000, Kammoun made about 30 calls to Tunisia,
Pakistan, Dubai, Italy, Germany, including to the leader of the German
terrorist cell raided in late December, and to Britain, including two
calls to Abu Doha.
PSD To HTML conversion is important to webmasters because they cannot use the PSD file as it is for their web pages. if you need PSD To HTML conversion service save yourself some time, effort and money and send it in to the professionals. Italian investigators said there
were many connections between the Italian cell, run by Ben Khemais, and
the Frankfurt cell raided last December. That cell was led by Mohamed
Bensakhria, also known as “Meliani,” an Algerian who escaped from
Germany but was arrested in Spain on June 22 on French charges that his
group planned to attack Strasbourg. Bensakhria’s German telephone number
was called several times by Ben Khemais and his associates in Milan, the
report said. Digos agents also found his number during a raid on another
Milan apartment last April during the crackdown on the Italian cell, along
with a note reproduced in the report with agents’ notations, reading:
“Mliani (“Mliani” stands for “Meliani”) al Ansari (“Ansari”
in Arabic means “The supporter”) Germi (“Germi” stands for
Germany).” In addition, German police stopped Ben Khemais, al Sakkaf and
another man on May 20, 2000, in Rosenheim, Bavaria, for attempting to
enter the country illegally and turned them back to Italy, according to
the report.
Following the December raid and
arrests in Frankfurt, Ben Khemais was wiretapped giving orders to what
Italian authorities said were accomplices escaping from Germany. “Tell
him to send me a photocopy of his passport,” Ben Khemais said, according
to the report. “Stamps are ready.”
Italian authorities have also
linked Ben Khemais to a terrorist cell in Spain. The report said that
Italian, French and Spanish agents trailed him as he traveled by train in
late March from Milan to Valencia, with stops in Paris, Lyon and Pamplona.
Along the way, the report said, he met with Madjid Sahouane, one of the
suspects arrested in Spain in the wake of the Sept. 11 bombings.
Spanish police lost the trail
after Ben Khemais and a group of men, including a suspected Algerian
terrorist, left a mosque in Valencia.
“Even without knowing what was
the result of the meeting in Valencia, this activity proves the
international connections and the importance of the probed Sami Essid,”
the Italian report said.
Ben Khemais has refused to talk
to Dambruoso, the Italian prosecutor on the case. But he told the Italian
newspaper Il Corriere della Sera, “I don't know Osama Bin Laden.
I don't throw bombs. I only helped Muslim brothers …who fight for their
freedom in many countries, especially in Chechnya.” Maaroufi told the
Italian daily La Repubblica, “It's all untrue. We are not
terrorists.”
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