U.S. Tsunami Aid Going to al Qaida-Linked Group
Carl Limbacher and NewsMax.com Staff
Friday, Jan. 7, 2005 7:32 a.m. EST
Some of the massive U.S. aid package earmarked for Indonesian tsunami
victims is going to a radical Muslim group with direct ties to al Qaida,
including at least one terrorist leader who is accused of helping the 9/11
hijackers.
The radical Muslim group Laskar Mujahidin has reportedly dispatched 200
of its members to the hard-hit provincial capital of Banda Aceh, where they
were seen Thursday unloading truckloads of aid at the military airport
there.
According to terrorism experts in the region, Laskar Mujahidin has links to
terror groups outside Indonesia, including al Qaida, the Associated Press
reported Friday.
The group was once headed by Abu Bakar Bashir, an Islamic cleric now on
trial as an alleged leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, the AP said. Some Jemaah
Islamiyah members are believed to have helped the kamikaze hijackers
who killed 3,000 Americans on Sept. 11.
Laskar Mujahidin also accepted aid offered by an emissary of Osama bin
Laden, according terrorism expert Sidney Jones.
At a camp set up by the group, a sign was spotted Thursday that
read, "Islamic Law Enforcement."
In a report two weeks after the 9/11 attacks, the New York Times reported
that Indonesia played host to a number of terrorist groups allied with bin
Laden.
"Since the attacks on Sept. 11, radical Islamic fringe groups here among
the 210 million people of largely Muslim Indonesia have been threatening
holy war against the United States and against Americans who live here,"
the Times said.
"Their appeals to Muslim solidarity have fired hundreds of young men with
a passion to fight to defend Afghanistan, many of them unemployed and
aimless in the broken economy.
"The United States Embassy said today that gangs of young men had
begun carrying out what they call sweeps in several cities, looking for
Americans to expel. The embassy said Americans and American interests
had been threatened.
"One of the angry young would-be warriors who marched through the rain
here today with masks and headbands chanting, 'Go to hell America.'"
But in the midst of the tsunami relief efforts, it's Laskar Mujahidin that has
raised the most concern. The group's al Qaida ties have other aid groups
working to help tsunami victims afraid of being seen with Americans.
"Our teams are told that they should not fly in American army helicopters,
since we're concerned that they could be a particular target," said Michel
Brugiere, director of the French medical group Doctors of the World.
(link to original story):
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/1/7/73549.shtml
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The U.S. government has pledged an initial $350 million in aid. Currently
being reported in the mainstream media,
private contributions
from the U.S. have surpassed $325 million. (the UN can kiss our "stingy"
butts...)
Personally, I'd like to see more private U.S. contributions going to OUR
men and women serving overseas and to the families left behind...
especially those families who have lost loved ones or those who have
come home with devastating injuries. (Current death benefit in the U.S.
military is $12,500 ... that's it.) One place to donate that has been
suggested is:
http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org