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          PAS : KE ARAH PEMERINTAHAN ISLAM YANG ADIL
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Assalammualaikum...
            Cuba lihat kenyataan dibawah, agaknya apakah impact yg akan
kita terima especially BA... For sure that Mahaded will plan something
base on this statement...

*"One of the suspects, Khalid Al-Midhar, was seen on a surveillance tape 
from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, meeting with a man that U.S. officials suspect 
played a hand in the USS Cole's bombing last October."

           Sama-sama kita berdoa moga kejayaan dipihak Islam agama ALLAH
yg suci ini. ALLAH-HUAKBHAR...

N.AZMAN..

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources: 2 hijackers were under watch, Cole suspects
September 15, 2001 Posted: 6:26 PM EDT (2226 GMT)

A surveillance tape showed a suspect accused of slamming an airliner into 
the Pentagon meeting with a man linked to the USS Cole bombing.


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Two men suspected of hijacking the airliner that slammed 
into the Pentagon were under surveillance prior to Tuesday's attacks because 
of their alleged associations with Osama bin Laden and the USS Cole bombing, 
sources said.

One of the suspects, Khalid Al-Midhar, was seen on a surveillance tape from 
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, meeting with a man that U.S. officials suspect 
played a hand in the USS Cole's bombing last October.

Al-Midhar frequently visited Salem Alhamzi and his brother Nawaq in the 
brothers' San Diego, California, apartment complex, neighbors said.

Both Al-Midhar and Alhamzi were both on an FBI watch list, according to 
intelligence sources.

Government documents released about the suspected hijackers indicate all 
three men joined Hani Hanjour, another suspected hijacker, in Phoenix, 
Arizona.

Hanjour received flight training at CRM Cockpit Resource Management in 
Scottsdale, Arizona.

All four are believed to have been aboard American Airlines Flight 77, the 
hijacked jet that slammed into the Pentagon.

Meanwhile, the Immigration and Naturalization Service has detained 25 
individuals on possible immigration violations, the Justice Department said 
Saturday, as investigators searched for those behind Tuesday's terrorist 
attacks and worked to prevent future ones.

Law enforcement sources said authorities were still operating under the 
assumption that additional attacks had been thwarted and new assaults 
remained a possibility. But Attorney General John Ashcroft said he was 
pleased, overall, with the investigation's progress.

"We are making the kinds of contacts and developing the information that 
allow us to describe this as proceeding with reasonable success," Ashcroft 
said Saturday from Camp David, before meeting with President Bush.

Only one person -- first detained Thursday at New York's John F. Kennedy 
International Airport for allegedly possessing a false pilot's license -- 
has been charged in connection with the investigation.

An arrest warrant has been issued in New York for a second material witness 
in Tuesday's terrorist attacks, the Justice Department announced Saturday. 
The person was not in custody and was not identified, and the person's 
whereabouts were unknown.

Law enforcement officials said Friday they have issued at least 35 search 
warrants and hundreds of subpoenas, while interviewing hundreds more. A 
total of 12,000 photos have been taken of all the crimes scenes, officials 
said, and more than 5,200 calls have been phoned into the FBI's hot line.

The investigation -- the largest in U.S. history -- involves 4,000 special 
FBI agents and more than 3,000 support personnel.

Among the latest developments:

-- President Bush said there was "no question" Saudi multimillionaire Osama 
bin Laden was "a prime suspect" in Tuesday's attacks, saying America was 
prepared to do "whatever it takes" to root out those responsible.

-- Family members of Ziad Samir Jarrah -- who the FBI believes helped hijack 
one of the planes used in Tuesday's attacks -- told CNN on Saturday that he 
spent some time recently in Afghanistan, the country accused of harboring 
bin Laden.

-- Two men in INS custody in Texas were transported to New York late Friday 
for further questioning regarding the attacks, with sources calling the two 
very helpful in moving the investigation forward.

-- The owners of California-based King Aviation School said four FBI agents 
searched their company's records Friday, matching "one or more names" to a 
list of suspected hijackers.

-- The planes that crashed into the World Trade Center towers and the 
Pentagon were each taken over by five hijackers, with four people hijacking 
the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania. All have been either directly or 
indirectly linked to bin Laden.

-- A defense official said two suspects may have attended U.S. military-run 
flight schools in Texas and Alabama.

-- The FBI said investigators have recovered information from the flight 
data recorder from American Airlines Flight 77, which slammed into the 
Pentagon. A damaged cockpit voice recorder was also found. The flight data 
recorder and cockpit voice recorder also have been recovered from United 
Airlines Flight 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania.

-- Ashcroft said Friday that the FBI has distributed a list of about 100 
people who may have information that could assist in the investigation by 
law enforcement agencies across the U.S. along with the Federal Aviation 
Administration, airlines, U.S. Customs and the Border Patrol.

-- The Treasury Department established a task force to track the assets of 
terrorist groups and disrupt their fund-raising.

-- Sen. Joseph Biden told CNN on Friday that there is evidence that several 
terrorist cells worked together to plan and carry out Tuesday's attacks.

-- The international police agency Interpol issued a special alert for bin 
Laden and said it received tips from 40 nations that may aid in his 
apprehension.

-- CNN's Berlin Bureau Chief Bettina Luscher, Beirut Bureau Chief Brent 
Sadler, and correspondents David Ensor, Kelli Arena, Susan Candiotti and 
Mike Boettcher contributed to this report.



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