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Frenchman
may have terrorists ties
Man
said he made three trips to training camps
By
PIERRE-ANTOINE SOUCHARD
Associated Press
PARIS
A man in French custody has told investigators he crossed paths
in Afghanistan with Sept. 11 suspect Zacarias Moussaoui, so-called
shoe bomber Richard C. Reid and convicted terrorist Ahmed Ressam,
officials said Monday.
Yacine Akhnouche,
27, a Frenchman of Algerian origin, has apparently talked freely
to investigators about his past ties with Islamic militants like
Moussaoui, the only person charged in connection with the Sept.
11 terror attacks, according to judicial officials and anti-terrorism
investigators who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of
anonymity.
Akhnouche and
two others arrested Feb. 4 around Paris were placed under investigation
on Friday and suspected of a logistical role in a foiled plot to
bomb a cathedral in Strasbourg, France during millennium celebrations.
Akhnouche made
three trips to training camps in Afghanistan in 1997, 1998
and 2000, investigators said. There, in 2000, he allegedly met Moussaoui,
a Frenchman charged in the United States with aiding the Sept. 11
hijackers. He also met Reid, the so-called shoe bomber arrested
after allegedly trying to ignite explosives in his sneakers on a
Paris-Miami flight.
Also, on a trip
to Afghanistan in 1998, Akhnouche met Ahmed Ressam, the Algerian
convicted in the millennium bombing plot in the United States, the
officials said.
He talked
a lot, said one investigating magistrate. Akhnouche
confirmed a certain number of things that we already knew, or supposed,
he said, adding that Reid told American investigators that he never
went to Afghanistan, just to Pakistan.
Akhnouche also
implicated a man known as Abu Doha, jailed in Britain, in the Strasbourg
Cathedral plot.
The plot was
foiled after German police discovered video footage of the cathedral
and marketplace during a raid on an apartment. Four people were
arrested in Frankfurt, and other suspects were arrested in France,
Spain and Belgium.
Abu Doha, also
known as Amar Makhlulif, is a London-based Algerian wanted by U.S.
officials in connection with the plot to blow up the Los Angeles
airport during millennium celebrations. Makhlulif, who is awaiting
extradition, has been portrayed in a U.S. grand jury indictment
as a key figure in Osama bin Ladens al-Qaeda network who ran
an Algerian terrorism cell.
Akhnouche claimed
that Abu Doha steered young Islamic militants toward Afghanistans
training camps, the judicial officials said.
Akhnouche has
also provided information on Abu Zubaydah, top military operations
chief in al-Qaeda, as well as information on a man identified as
Abu Jafar. It was unclear whether he is the same man as Abu Jafar
al-Jaziri, an al-Qaeda finance and logistics chief who was apparently
killed in bombing raids by the U.S.-led coalition.
In addition,
Akhnouche provided names of people in France linked to the assassination
of Afghan resistance leader Ahmed Shah Massood just days before
the Sept. 11 attacks, investigators said.
Two men were
placed under investigation in Paris in mid-January on suspicion
of providing support to the assassins, who posed as journalists,
and it was not immediately clear whether the names matched.
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