Biochemist has 'no al-Qaeda link' 

An Egyptian biochemist held for questioning over the London bomb
attacks has no links to al-Qaeda, Egypt's interior minister has said.
Habib al-Adli told Egyptian newspaper Al-Jumhuriyah media speculation
about Magdi Mahmoud al-Nashar was groundless. 

He also denied agents of the British security services had 
participated in Mr al-Nashar's interrogation in Cairo. 

Unofficial sources in Cairo and London say British agents are 
observing the 33-year-old's ongoing interrogation. 

The Egyptians are doing everything possible to cooperate, the sources
say. 

Mr al-Adli told Al-Jumhuriyah that reports elsewhere in the British
and Arab media linking Mr al-Nashar to al-Qaeda were "groundless" and
based on a hasty conclusion. 


 Interior Minister Habib al-Adli has said that 33-year old Egyptian
Chemist Dr Magdi al-Nashar, who has been arrested recently by the
security forces, has no connection with the terrorist al-Qaeda
organisation Al-Jumhuriyah 


The ministry on Friday released an extract from the interrogation in
which Mr al-Nashar denied having any role in the attacks. 

He had told investigators he was on holiday, all his belongings 
remained in the UK and he planned to return there, the ministry said
in a statement. 

British police are searching a house in Leeds linked to Mr al-Nashar. 

They have turned their attention to finding those who may have helped
the bombers carry out last Thursday's attacks - in which 55 people
died, including three bombers. 

They know three of the bombers were from West Yorkshire - Hussain, 18,
of Holbeck, Leeds; Shehzad Tanweer, 22, of Beeston, Leeds, and
Mohammad Sidique Khan, 30, of Dewsbury - and are searching their
homes. 

They are also searching the home of the man they believe is the 
fourth bomber, Lindsey Germaine, a Jamaican-born man who lived in
Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire. 

Meanwhile Britain's top Muslims have branded the London suicide 
bombings "utterly criminal, totally reprehensible, and absolutely un-
Islamic". 

A joint statement of condemnation came as 22 leaders and scholars met
at the Islamic Cultural Centre, in London. 


 HAVE YOUR SAY 
Mutual respect between religions is the way forward, which can only be
ascertained by allaying fears and listening to the concerns of local
people Eddie Espie, Cookstown 


Muslim leaders said there could never be any excuse for taking an
innocent life, it said. 

The statement said everyone must confront the problems of 
Islamophobia, racism, unemployment, economic depravation and social
exclusion. 

Of the Muslim stance on suicide bombing, the leaders said: "There can
never be any excuse for taking an innocent life. 

"The Koran clearly declares that killing an innocent person was 
tantamount to killing all mankind and likewise saving a single life
was as if one had saved the life of all mankind. 

Those who carried out the bombing, the statement said, "should in no
sense be regarded as martyrs". 

Both Muslims and non-Muslims should help bring the people behind the
bombing to justice, it said. 


 We are devastated our son may have been brainwashed into carrying out
such an atrocity Mohammad Sidique Khan's 


"The pursuit of justice for the victims of last week's attacks is an
obligation under the faith of Islam." 

But Britain's highest ranking Asian police officer, Tarique Ghaffur,
says Muslims and their leaders must do more than just condemn the
bombings. 

In his only interview on the attacks, Mr Ghaffur, the Metropolitan
Police Assistant Commissioner, urged Muslims and their leaders to
inform on potential terrorists and their supporters. 

The police would protect informers, using the lessons learned from
tackling serious and organised crime, the head of the Met's serious
crimes directorate added. 

They would have to engage better with minorities - but the minorities
would have to take the first step, he said. 

An air of radicalism had been building up among a minority of 
Muslims, Mr Ghaffur added. 

In other developments: 


Mohammad Sidique Khan's family say they believe the Circle Line 
bomber could have been "brainwashed" by terrorists. 

The family of 18-year-old London bomber Hasib Mir Hussain said they
were "devastated" at his involvement. 

Forty-one bomb victims have been identified and 31 named. 

The government plans new criminal offences of providing or receiving
training in the use of hazardous substances; of acts preparatory to
terrorism; and of inciting terrorism indirectly, Home Office minister
Hazel Blears said. 

It emerged bomber Mohammad Sadique Khan, a teacher, met MPs Hilary
Benn and Jon Trickett during his school's trip to the Palace of
Westminster in July 2004. 

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/4688501.stm

Published: 2005/07/16 13:34:43 GMT

© BBC MMV







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