U.K. seeks extradition of terror suspect
Updated 8/28/2006 10:30 AM ET
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - The British government has requested the
extradition of Rashid Rauf, a Briton arrested in Pakistan earlier this month
in connection with the alleged plot to blow up U.S.-bound jetliners,
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said Monday.
 
Rauf - earlier identified by Pakistan as a "key person" in the plot - was
being investigated for alleged links with al-Qaeda, in connection with
terrorist threats in Britain and in Pakistan, said ministry spokeswoman
Tasnim Aslam.
 
Aiden Liddle, a spokesman for the British Embassy, confirmed it had
submitted the extradition request, but said it was in connection with a
British investigation into a 2002 murder. Rauf moved to Pakistan shortly
after his maternal uncle was stabbed to death that year.
 
Pakistani officials have said Rauf, a British Muslim of Pakistani origin,
helped coordinate the alleged plot to bomb trans-Atlantic jetliners that was
thwarted in Britain this month.
 
Britain announced Aug. 10 that it had broken up the plot by arresting about
two dozen people across that country. Stricter security rules were
immediately imposed at Britain's airports and elsewhere, causing widespread
disruptions in air travel for days.
 
The New York Times reported Monday that British police moved in after
surveillance equipment monitored two young Muslim men making a "martyrdom"
tape justifying the planned suicide attacks on airliners as revenge against
the United States and its allies Britain and Israel.
 
The Times quoted unidentified British officials as saying considerable
progress had been made in planning the attacks, but the alleged plotters had
not obtained plane tickets and weren't ready to strike. Police, however,
decided to act because they feared there might be an attack by other
plotters unknown to them, the Times said.
 
Pakistan has detained at least seven people in its own investigation of the
alleged plot, but has identified only Rauf.
 
On Saturday, Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said Rauf had given
Pakistani interrogators "vital clues" about the plot. He also said Rauf had
"wider international links" and was in touch with an Afghanistan-based
al-Qaeda leader. He did not provide any details.
 
Aslam said the information from Pakistan's investigation was being shared
with Britain.
 
She also said Rauf had been arrested in Rawalpindi, a city near Islamabad.
Intelligence officials said earlier that he was picked up in Bhawalpur, a
stronghold of the outlawed militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed in eastern
Pakistan.
 
According to an in-law of Rauf's, he settled in Bhawalpur after emigrating
from Britain and was tied by marriage to Masood Azhar, leader of
Jaish-e-Mohammed, fueling suspicions that Pakistani militants could be
linked to the jetliner plot.
 
Britain and the U.S. have praised the role played by Pakistan for its role
in thwarting the plot. Pakistan is a key counterterrorism ally of the West
but has also been plagued for years by Islamic militancy.
 
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
 
 
Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-08-28-pakistan-extradition_x.htm?csp
=34
 * 
 


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