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Drug Sales Financed Bombers
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n579/a07.html
Newshawk: chip
Pubdate: Thu, 15 Apr 2004
Source: Charlotte Observer (NC)
Copyright: 2004 The Charlotte Observer
Contact: opinion@charlotteobserver.com
Website: http://www.charlotte.com/mld/observer/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78
Author: Mar Roman, Associated Press
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203
(Terrorism)
DRUG SALES FINANCED BOMBERS
MADRID, Spain - Terrorists who carried out the Madrid train
bombings were members of an autonomous cell who may have had ties
with fundamentalists elsewhere but who got financing chiefly from
drug profits, the interior minister said Wednesday.
Officials are investigating the possibility that someone with ties
to radical Islam -- and perhaps terrorist training in Afghanistan
or elsewhere - -- was the overall leader of the March 11 attacks
that killed 191 people, but aren't sure such a person even exists,
Interior Minister Angel Acebes said.
Acebes said the person "has been called the emir," but
he would not give any other details.
Spain has received a letter and a video from an al-Qaida-linked
group claiming responsibility for the Madrid attacks that warned
of more violence unless Spain withdraws its troops from Iraq and
Afghanistan. But they believe the group was largely confined
to Spain and most of its members are either in custody or dead.
The on-the-ground coordinator of the attacks is believed to be
Serhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, a 35-year-old Tunisian real estate
agent who blew himself up with six other suspects on April 3 as
police moved in to arrest them, Acebes told a news conference.
The interior minister's remarks came as reports emerged that the
cell might have been planning to target Jewish targets in Madrid.
On Wednesday, members of Spain's Jewish community and Spanish
officials said police searching the apartment where the suspects
killed themselves found a document that mentioned a Jewish
cemetery and cultural center called La Masada, 20 miles northwest
of Madrid.
Acebes said the cell that staged the March 11 attacks "was
local and autonomous, but its leaders have connections with other
fundamentalist groups." He said investigators are pursuing
leads in Britain, Germany, France, Belgium, Tunisia and Morocco.
The group's funding came chiefly from drug sales, he said.
The bombers apparently obtained the dynamite from petty criminals
in a coal-mining region of northern Spain who accepted drugs as
payment, Acebes said.
The bombers used money from drug sales to rent an apartment, buy a
car and purchase cell phones used as detonators in the bombs,
Acebes said.
Acebes repeated that the core of the cell has been neutralized
through a wave of arrests and the deaths of the suspects who
committed suicide. But he refused to rule out future attacks
by cell members who remain at large.
"Further actions cannot be ruled out, given the fanaticism of
these individuals," Acebes said.
Eighteen people have been charged in the attacks -- six with mass
murder and the rest with belonging to or collaborating with a
terrorist organization. Fourteen of the 18 are Moroccan.
Six others arrested in the past week have yet to go before a
judge. And a fugitive Bosnian suspect named by the Interior
Ministry, Sanel Sjekirica, 23, said from Sweden on Wednesday that
he would turn himself in to the Spanish authorities this weekend.
Sjekirica said he once shared an apartment with Fakhet but had
nothing to do with the attacks.
"I was surprised," Sjekirica said. "Of course
it is not correct."
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