(AP) U.N. Asked to Punish Two Saudi Activists
By EDITH M. LEDERER
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS
The United States, Britain and Saudi Arabia asked the U.N. Security
Council on Tuesday to impose sanctions on British-based Saudi dissident
Saad al-Faqih for allegedly providing financial and material support to
al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden.

The United States and Saudi Arabia also asked the council to impose
sanctions on Saudi businessman Adel Abdul Jalil Batterjee, who was
instrumental in founding the Benevolence International Foundation, an
Islamic charity that the United States has previously deemed a global
terrorist group.

Council diplomats said the two names were circulated among the 15
Security Council members on Tuesday. If there are no objections by noon
Thursday they will be added to the list of individuals subject to U.N.
sanctions.

Anti-terrorism sanctions require all 191 U.N. member states to impose a
travel ban and arms embargo against those linked to the Taliban or
al-Qaida and to freeze their financial assets. The list currently
includes 318 individuals and 115 groups.

Al-Faqih, who advocates replacing the Saudi monarchy with a popularly
elected government, heads the Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia in
London. He claimed in May that he was the real target when the Saudi
Arabian government accused British civilians and diplomats of
involvement in bombings four years ago.

According to a U.S. Treasury statement on Tuesday, Al-Faqih once shared
an office in the late 1990s with Khaled al Fawwaz, who served as an
operative for bin Laden in Britain. The exiled Saudi physician also paid
for a satellite phone that bin Laden allegedly used to help carry out
the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Kenya Tanzania, it said.

While al-Faqih's movement has issued disclaimers warning users not to
attribute postings on its website to al-Qaida, the Treasury statement
said extremists use the site "to post all al-Qaida-related statements
and images." Information available to the U.S. and British governments
"shows that the messages are intended to provide ideological and
financial support to al-Qaida affiliated networks and potential
recruits," it said.

Batterjee founded the precursor to the Benevolence International
Foundation in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan in the late 1980s, providing
support to Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, who is already on the
U.N. sanctions list.

In 1993, Batterjee incorporated the foundation in the United States
where it provided financial support to Islamic fighters worldwide,
including members of al-Qaida, the Treasury statement said, adding that
this was confirmed at one point by bin Laden.

"Adel Batterjee has ranked as one of the world's foremost terrorist
financiers, who employed his private wealth and a network of charitable
fronts to bankroll the murderous agenda of al-Qaida," said Stuart Levy,
the U.S. Treasury's undersecretary for the Office of Terrorism and
Financial Intelligence.

"A worldwide asset freeze, including in his home country of Saudi
Arabia, will deal a serious blow to this key terrorist facilitator,"
Levy said in the statement.



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