Egypt identifies Sinai bomb suspect
by
Tuesday 26 July 2005 6:04 PM GMT

A police dog sniffs abandoned vehicles in Sharm al-Shaikh

Egyptian investigators said they have identified a man suspected to 
be one of the bombers who died in the Sharm al-Shaikh attacks as 
Cairo denied the involvement of Pakistani nationals.

Many aspects of the investigation were shrouded in mystery on 
Tuesday, three days after the blasts, with no clear direction 
emerging so far, contradictory information on the casualty toll and 
three claims for the attacks.

 

Security sources said investigators suspect a known Sinai Islamist 
called Yusef Badran was one of the bombers involved in the triple 
bomb attacks in the Red Sea resort on Saturday.

DNA tests were being carried out on his family and compared with the 
remains of the suspected Ghazala Gardens hotel bomber, the most 
devastating of the strikes.

Badran had been suspected of involvement in another wave of attacks 
that killed 34 people in the Sinai resorts of Taba and Nuweiba 
farther north in October.

Missing

His family in the Sinai town of al-Arish said he had been missing for 
months.

"He was arrested after the Taba bombings and later released," his 
mother-in-law, Mariam al-Sawarta, said. "But I know nothing about his 
situation. He got married and lived in a village called al-Metni, 
south of al-Arish."

A tourist takes pictures of a car
damaged in Saturday's blasts
 

Egyptian forces have been combing the Sinai since Saturday's 
bombings, arresting about 200 people.

Interior Minister Habib al-Adly said as early as Saturday there could 
be links between the Sharm al-Shaikh bombings and the
anti-Israeli attacks in Taba.

Denial

Officials denied the involvement of any Pakistani nationals in the 
Sharm al-Shaikh bombings.

In a twist that heightened fears of a new wave of coordinated global 
al-Qaeda-linked terror attacks after the 7 July attacks in London, 
Egyptian security sources had said Monday that six Pakistanis who 
entered the country this month were being sought over the Sharm al-
Shaikh bombings.

Their pictures were among those of dozens of suspects posted in 
police stations in the Sharm al-Shaikh area and in Cairo.

 

Egypt's ambassador to Pakistan Hussein Haridy said he had informed 
Islamabad "that no Pakistani national was involved in the terrorist 
acts that rocked Sharm al-Shaikh late last Saturday".

 

Adly's first adviser, Mohammed Sharawi, said that the six Pakistanis 
were not linked to the bombings and that security services never 
distributed the pictures.

 

"It seems the government has no serious leads and it cannot conceal 
its unease," said Dhiaa Rashwan, from the Al-Ahram Centre for 
Strategic Studies.

Glitzy beach

Three days after the bombs ripped through the glitzy beach and dive 
resort, a question remained about the death toll, with the health and 
tourism ministries saying 67 people had perished.

"The death toll stands at 67, among them 16 foreigners," Tourism 
Ministry spokeswoman Hala al-Khatib said on Tuesday. Hospital 
officials have previously said that 88 died.

"It seems the government has no serious leads and it cannot conceal 
its unease".

Dhiaa Rashwan, 
Al-Ahram Centre for Strategic Studies

Al-Khatib refused to give the breakdown of nationalities, but reports 
suggested Italians, Turks and Britons are among the foreign dead, 
whose number is expected to rise.

Revenge and response

A previously unknown movement calling itself the Unity and Jihad 
Group in Egypt said it perpetrated the attacks "in revenge for our 
brothers in Iraq and Afghanistan... and in response to the war 
against terror".

"It was also out of loyalty to the leaders of the mujahedeen within 
the Al-Qaeda network, Shaikh Osama bin Laden and Sheikh Ayman al-
Zawahiri, may God preserve them," said the statement, whose 
authenticity could not be verified.

The group said it also carried out the October bombings. It named 
five "martyrs" it said died in the Sharm al-Shaikh attacks. The names 
differed from those given by another group that claimed 
responsibility for the bombings on Monday, Mujahedeen Egypt.

The first group to claim responsibility for the attacks, the 
deadliest in Egypt, was a movement calling itself the al-Qaida 
Organization in the Levant and Egypt.

Pre-dawn bombs

Sharm al-Shaikh was crowded with tourists when the pre-dawn bombs 
went off and foreign embassy officials were still in the resort on 
Tuesday.

Police said about 600kg of explosives were used in the attacks that 
destroyed the Ghazala hotel and struck a car park and a busy market 
area.

South Sinai Governor Mustafa Afifi said a temporary checkpoint set up 
near the souq before the attacks had prevented one of the bombers 
from reaching a nearby hotel.

Agencies
By 

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/A2ED5330-3A6A-4E18-9ECD-
592A0236DFAB.htm
        Close




Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Kirim email ke