Arab news
Indonesia's Patek's arrest in Abbottabad `pure coincidence'

By NINIEK KARMINI | AP

Published: May 5, 2011 00:30 Updated: May 5, 2011 00:30

JAKARTA: A top Indonesian terror suspect arrested this year in the Pakistani 
town where Osama Bin Laden was killed was intending to meet the Al-Qaeda chief, 
officials here say, raising questions over how isolated Bin Laden was in his 
final months.

Indonesian and Pakistani intelligence officers said the arrest of Umar Patek on 
Jan. 25 in Abbottabad by Pakistani officers did not lead to the American raid 
on Bin Laden on Monday and the two men did not meet.

A senior American counterterrorism official said Patek's arrest in Abbottabad 
"appears to have been pure coincidence" and also said they did not meet.

Patek is wanted for his role in the 2002 Bali bombings and trained with 
Al-Qaeda in Pakistan before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in the United States. He 
is a key Southeast Asian militant and was one of the last on the run believed 
to have contacts with Al-Qaeda's central command.

"The information we have is that Umar Patek ... was in Pakistan with his 
Filipino wife trying to meet Bin Laden," Defense Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro 
told reporters Wednesday.

Chairul Akbar, an official at Indonesia's Anti-Terrorism Agency, earlier told 
the Associated Press that Patek and his wife traveled to Pakistan using false 
names — Anis Alawi Jaafar and Fatima Zahra — on Aug. 30, 2010, aiming to meet 
Bin Laden to get his "support and protection." "He was instructed to go to 
Abbottabad to meet other militants," Akbar said.

Akbar said it was possible that Patek met Al-Qaeda leaders in January somewhere 
in Pakistan but that he did not meet with Bin Laden himself.

Many intelligence officials had assumed Bin Laden was living in the remote 
Afghan border region, possibly in a cave, meeting only with a small trusted 
circle. While it's possible that Patek may have been misguided if he thought he 
could meet Bin Laden, the fact he ended up in the same town as him with that 
intention is striking, and could suggest someone told him Bin Laden was there 
and was prepared to see him.

Pakistani officials kept Patek's arrest under wraps until late March, when the 
AP broke the news. A Pakistani official said he was tracked down after 
authorities arrested an Al-Qaeda courier in the town called Tahir Shehzad, who 
worked as a clerk at the post office.

Tahir had been under surveillance since last year when he was spotted in 
Abbottabad with an Arab terror suspect, said the intelligence official.

"Indonesian authorities need to be asking Patek exactly what the nature of his 
communication was with the Al-Qaeda organization and who else from Southeast 
Asia is actively working with Al-Qaeda in propaganda, training, or even 
operations," said Sidney Jones, an expert on Southeast Asian militancy.

Muhammad Jibriel, an Indonesian currently serving time in Jakarta over hotel 
bombings in 2009. was found guilty of obtaining funding for the bombings in 
2008. By his own admission, he also traveled to North Waziristan before his 
arrest.

© 2010 Arab News




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