Friday, 02/03/2006
Yemen
23 members of Al Qaeda escape from a prison in Sanaa, Yemen, the capital. The prison was at the central headquarters of Yemen's military intelligence services building (Political Security Organization of Yemen) in the center of the capital. Checkpoints were set up around the city to prevent the escapees from fleeing into the mountain tribal areas around the city.
Escaped inmates included those accused of bombing the USS Cole, 10/2000, and those accused of attacking French supertanker Limburg, 2002. At least 13 of 23 of the escapees were convicted Al Qaeda members.
Escapees:
- Abu Asim Al-Ahdal (Abu 'A'sim Al-Ahdal) #2 Al Qaeda in Yemen, escaped
- Jamal al-Badawi (Jamal Badawi) - convicted of plotting, preparing, and helping the Cole bombings; sentenced to death in 09/2004
- Fawaz Yahya al-Rabeiee (al-Rabe'ie, al-Rabahi), whom Interpol considers one of the people responsible for the Limburg attack, convicted for an attack on a helicopter carrying Hunt Oil Co employees a month after the Limburg attack, plus explosions at a civil aviation authority building
Escape coincides with the trial of another group of suspected Al Qaeda members, 15 people who were charged in involvement of terror operations in Yemen, including Mohammed Hamdi al-Ahdal, another Cole and Limburg bombing suspect; the trial was posponed indefinately
Escape occured via a 140 meter (460 feet) tunnel connecting the prison to a mosque in Sanaa.
"Al-Badawi broke out of jail in 2003 and his escape had been facilitated by prison guards," Neal Quillian of the London firm, Control Risks, says. "So this isn’t the first incidence where Al-Qaeda members have escaped from a Yemeni jail." (globalsecurity)
After he escaped from the prison in Aden and was recaptured, he was sent to the headquarters, the most secure prison, in Sanaa'
It's a big blow to Yemen's truthiness in the war on terror, since the Yemeni authorities will be scrutinized for any complicity in this escape.
Under anonymity a security official said:
"It couldn't have happened without the coordination of high ranking officers in the intelligence," said one official. He pointed to possible infiltration of the intelligence agency by militants, saying hundreds of Yemenis who fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s against Russian occupation were given jobs with the security forces when they returned home.
"It is no surprise that many of these former fighters are sympathetic to al-Qaida," he said. (AP, 02/06/2006)
Additionally, in July 2005, 4 Al Qaeda members broke out of Bagram airbase in Afghanistan. Among them was Omar al-Farouq, a top leader of al Qaeda in Southeast Asia. (BBC, AP)
In Afghanistan, a search for the four al-Qaida members who escaped in July is still continuing, said U.S. military spokesman Lt. Mike Cody said. Military officials declined to say how they broke out of the high-security facility at Bagram.
The four boasted about their breakout on a video believed filmed in Afghanistan and broadcast in October on Dubai-based TV station Al-Arabiya. They claimed they picked a lock and timed the escape for a Sunday when many of the Americans on the base were off duty.
Escapees, according to district chief of Bagram, Kabir Ahmed (Times Online, 07/2005):
- Abdullah Hashimi, from Syria
- Mehmood Ahmed Mohammed, from Kuwait
- Mehmood Alfathani, from Saudi Arabia (Mohammed al-Qahtani)
- Mohammed Hassan, from Libya (aka Sheikh Abu Yahia al-Lybi)
"God willing, they (the Taliban) will slaughter you," he screamed into the camera during the alleged attack, pointing to Taliban fighters who were seen collecting spoils of weapons from the deserted post.
"Every time we attack you, you run away like women," he said wagging his finger angrily.
- Mohammed al-Qahtani, escaped militant, on an al-Arabia videotape. (Al Bahhar, 01/2006)
Abdul Latif Hakimi, a spokesman of the Taliban movement, had told AFP the four men were being looked after at a Taliban hideout.
Omar al Farouq, an Iraqi Kuwati national, one of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants in Southeast Asia until Indonesian authorities captured him in the summer of 2002 and turned him over to the United States, was reported to have escaped in this breakout, but he's not mentioned in some of the later reports. This guy's interesting because he was supposed to be a star witness for US prisoner abuse in Afghanistan and Iraq. See Confessions of an al-Qaeda Terrorist, Time, 12/15/2005. Bagram air base was one of the places mentioned to have a CIA "black site."
Rumors on the blogosphere put Farouq alternatively in Iraq in the jihadi movement, turned or "let go" for CIA use, or "disappeared" by the military to keep him from testifying.
Interpol:
An Interpol "Orange Notice"was issued, which is a global security alert indicating that the escapees were "clear and present danger to all countries"
Interpol is seeking the names, photographs, and fingerprints of the escapees so that they can issue a "Red Notice" Interpol, 02/05/2006
Sources:
Al Ayyam, Yemen
Washington Post reprinting AP report
News Yemen
Telegraph (Limburg bombing, 7/2002)
"How did Al Qaeda operatives escape Afghan jail?" Al Jazeera (be noted this is from their "conspiracy" section)
"Suspected al-Qaeda leader escapes U.S. military prison," USA Today 11/2005
History:
USS Cole bombing, 10/12/2000
17 US soldiers killed in a suicide bombing attack at the port of Aden, Yemen
two suicide bombers blew up a boat full of explosives next to the ship
French supertanker Limburg, 2002
Euronav owned tanker, 2 Bulgarian crew members were killed, 90k barrels of oil spilled into the Gulf of Aden
CAIRO An Egyptian passenger ship carrying about 1,300 people sank in the Red Sea during bad weather, and rescue ships arriving at the scene pulled dozens of bodies from the water, an official said Friday. At least 30 people were rescued, some in lifeboats.
Ayman al-Kaffas, a spokesman for the Egyptian Embassy in London, told the British Broadcasting Corp. that "dozens of bodies of victims" had been pulled from the choppy waters between Saudi Arabia and Egypt.
The 35-year-old ship, Al-Salaam Boccaccio 98, went down 40 miles off the Egyptian port of Hurghada
The cause of the disaster was not immediately known, but there were high winds and a sandstorm overnight on Saudi Arabia's west coast, where the ship departed from. The ship sailed from Dubah, Saudi Arabia, at 7 p.m. Thursday and was scheduled to arrive eight hours later at Safaga, Egypt, about 190 kilometers, or 120 miles, away.
The ship disappeared from radar screens shortly after sailing, maritime officials in Suez said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.
The agent for the ship in Saudi Arabia, Farid al-Douadi, said the vessel was in good condition. The passengers were mostly Egyptians but included Saudis, Sudanese and others.
Marzouk said the ship - built in 1971 and renovated in 1990 in an Egyptian shipyard - was carrying 1,318 people, including a crew of 96. The ship is owned by an Egyptian firm, El-Salaam Maritime Transport.
Ship sinks in Red Sea; 1,300 passengers missing, IHT/AP
Egyptian ferry sinks in Red Sea, BBC
Google Earth Locations: ferry path, origin, destination, rescue launch locations.
NASA World Wind:
Duba, Saudi Arabia, Safaga, Egypt
On the heels of a poll where everybody but the Israelis thinks Americans are crap (BBC "
What the World Thinks of America", Pew
Global Attitudes Project), Turkey's new blockbuster "
Valley of the Wolves Iraq," opening tomorrow, portrays American soldiers as butchers:
"In the most expensive Turkish movie ever made, American soldiers in Iraq crash a wedding and pump a little boy full of lead in front of his mother.
They kill dozens of innocent people with random machine gun fire, shoot the groom in the head, and drag those left alive to Abu Ghraib prison - where a Jewish doctor cuts out their organs, which he sells to rich people in New York, London and Tel Aviv."
Neat, huh?
Billy Zane stars as the lead, rogue American soldier, and
Gary Busey as the Jewish-American doctor. This, apparently, after the popularity of a fiction book published in Turkey,
Metal Storm (nyt,
aljazeera), which portrays a bloody war between the US and Turkey in 2007.
Talk about a failure of "hearts and minds" - and these are our
allies. Meanwhile, US tv audiences are
glued forcefully to their navels (no offense to the "heros," you know who you are) with A&E's "Flight 93".