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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A27535-2002Sep2.html

 Al Qaeda Gold Moved to Sudan

 By Douglas Farah
 Financial officers of al Qaeda and the Taliban have quietly shipped large quantities 
of gold out of Pakistan to Sudan in recent weeks, transiting through the United Arab 
Emirates and Iran, according to European, Pakistani and U.S. investigators.

 The sources said several shipments of boxes of gold, usually disguised as other 
products, were taken by small boat from the Pakistani port of Karachi to either Iran 
or Dubai, and from there mixed with other goods and flown by chartered airplanes to 
Khartoum, the Sudanese capital.

  Although it is not clear how much gold has been moved, U.S. and European officials 
said the quantity was significant and was an important indicator that the al Qaeda 
network and members of Afghanistan's deposed Taliban militia still had access to large 
financial reserves.

 European and U.S. intelligence officials said the movement of gold also highlighted 
three significant developments in the war on terrorism: the growing role of Iranian 
intelligence units allied with the country's hard-line clerics in protecting and 
aiding al Qaeda; the potential reemergence of Sudan as a financial center for the 
organization; and the ability of the terrorist group to generate new sources of 
revenue despite the global crackdown on its finances.

  The sources said Sudan may have been chosen because Osama bin Laden, the Saudi-born 
al Qaeda leader, and other members of the network are familiar with the country and 
retain business contacts there. They said traditional havens for al Qaeda money on the 
Arabian peninsula such as Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates were under intense 
international scrutiny, while transactions in Sudan could more easily pass unnoticed.

 Gold has for years been the preferred financial instrument of the Taliban and al 
Qaeda. Most of the Taliban treasury was kept in gold when the militia ruled 
Afghanistan, and taxes were often collected in gold. Just before the Taliban and al 
Qaeda were driven from Afghanistan last year, the two groups shipped large amounts of 
gold to Dubai, and from there to other safe havens, according to U.S., European and 
Arab officials.

  Senior U.S. intelligence officials said they are investigating the information about 
the new gold shipments and had opened a case on the matter but had no further comment. 
"We know they are looking at new sources of revenue and are finding new ways to raise 
and move funds to where they are accessible," a U.S. official said. "The bankers are 
the ones that move the money and the bankers are not sitting in caves in Afghanistan."

  European and U.S. sources said they became aware of the shipments after they 
occurred, and have asked the Sudanese government to take measures to halt the flow. A 
spokesman for the Sudanese Embassy in Washington said he had no official information 
about the shipments and found the information "hard to believe."

 "Sudan is not going to allow anything like this to come in knowingly," the official 
said. "We are concerned about terrorism. We are on a high level of alert since 
September 11."

 But European intelligence sources said one of the hubs of bin Laden's organization 
continues to be Sudan, where he lived from 1991 to 1996, when he was forced to move to 
Afghanistan.

 Although the United States and other countries have praised Sudan for its cooperation 
in the war on terrorism, European and U.S. officials say that bin Laden, who invested 
tens of millions of dollars in the country when it harbored him, continues to have 
economic interests there. While living in Sudan, bin Laden operated a large 
construction business, bought extensive land holdings and helped found a bank.

  A senior European intelligence official said there was growing evidence that 
Khartoum was again serving "as a sort of hub" for al Qaeda business transactions. "He 
has banking contacts there, he has business contacts there and he is intimately 
familiar with the political and intelligence structure there," the official said. "He 
never fully left Sudan despite moving to Afghanistan."

 The gold appears to be the fruit of what one Pakistani businessman knowledgeable of 
Taliban financing called a "commodity for commodity exchange," with the Taliban and al 
Qaeda trading opium and heroin for gold. When the Taliban ruled Afghanistan, according 
to Pakistani intelligence officials, it actively engaged in opium and heroin 
production, and allowed al Qaeda to raise funds through taxing the cultivation of 
poppy, the raw material for heroin.

 The Pakistani businessman said that over the past two months Pakistani intelligence 
has picked up numerous reports indicating that al Qaeda and the Taliban were sending 
large amounts of gold out of Karachi after selling stashes of stored heroin and opium 
to drug traffickers in Central Asia. "This is new money, not money stashed away from 
before," the Pakistani source said. "The old network of moving drugs and trading it 
for gold, which they have done for years, is still operational."

  European and Pakistani sources said some of the assets moving through Iran may be 
the remnants of bin Laden's personal fortune. U.S. and European officials believe bin 
Laden inherited about $30 million in the early 1990s when his father, a Saudi 
construction magnate, died.

 European terrorism experts said they were particularly troubled by indications that 
Iranian intelligence officials were taking an active role in moving the gold. The 
sources said there were credible reports that some of the gold was flown on Iranian 
airplanes to Sudan.

 "Iran is not a monolith, there are different groups, and some seem to be directly 
helping these transfers," one official said. "It doesn't mean it is a decision of the 
government, but they do not have full control over what the security agencies do."

 Arab intelligence sources have reported that Iran is sheltering senior al Qaeda 
military and financial leaders in hotels and guest houses in the Afghan border cities 
of Mashhad and Zabol.

  Gold has long been a favorite way of storing wealth in Southeast Asia, the Arabian 
peninsula and northern Africa. Smuggling gold by sea from Karachi into Iran and Dubai 
is also a centuries-old activity.

 A draft United Nations report by a panel of experts states that al Qaeda's financial 
structure remains largely intact and retains access to tens of millions of dollars.

 "A large portfolio of ostensibly legitimate businesses continue to be maintained and 
managed on behalf of Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda by a number of, as yet, unidentified 
intermediaries and associates across North Africa, the Middle East, Europe and Asia," 
the report said. "Estimates put the value of this portfolio at around $30 million."

 The Treasury Department said the U.N. report presented an "incomplete picture of the 
financial war against terrorism." In a statement, a spokesman said that while much 
work remained to be done, the report did not measure the impact of seizures of 
millions of dollars in cash or the freezing of assets of more than 200 individuals 
since Sept. 11.

 European officials said some of the chartered planes used to transport the gold and 
other commodities for the Taliban and al Qaeda were linked to Victor Bout, a Russian 
arms merchant who maintains more than 50 aircraft in the United Arab Emirates.

 U.S. officials have called Bout the largest arms merchant in the world and say he has 
long had dealings with the Taliban, flying in weapons and medicine for the group when 
it governed Afghanistan.

 Despite an international arrest warrant issued in February for his arrest, Bout lives 
undisturbed in Moscow.

 Staff writer Dana Priest contributed to this report.

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