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Saudi suspect in 1996 anti-US bombing arrested: report

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A key suspect in the bombing of a housing complex in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 US airmen almost two decades ago has been captured, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

Ahmad Ibrahim al-Mughassil, who is wanted by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, is said to be the head of the Saudi Hezbollah's military wing, an outlawed organisation whose members are drawn from the kingdom's Shiite Muslim community.

The 48-year-old was detained in Beirut and sent to Saudi Arabia where he is being interrogated, the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat daily said quoting unnamed officials.

US and Saudi military personnel survey the damage to Khobar Towers in Dhahran on June 26  1996
US and Saudi military personnel survey the damage to Khobar Towers in Dhahran on June 26, 1996
, US Department of Defense/AFP

There was no immediate confirmation from the Saudi authorities.

The powerful bomb blast in June 1996, which also wounded more than 370 people, destroyed part of the eight-storey Khobar Towers in the eastern Saudi town of Dhahran.

US prosecutors have said Mughassil drove the explosives-laden truck and parked it outside the military compound.

The newspaper did not say when or how he was captured, but reported he had been "disguised in a way that made identifying him difficult".

US investigators inspect the site of a truck bomb that exploded outside a US military personnel hous...
US investigators inspect the site of a truck bomb that exploded outside a US military personnel housing complex in Dharhan, Saudi Arabia in June 1996
Jorge Ferrari, AFP/File

The FBI has offered a reward of up to $5 million (4.4 million euros) for information leading directly to his apprehension or conviction.

The Khobar Towers dormitory complex housed US, British, French and Saudi military personnel attached to the nearby King Abdul Aziz airbase.

In a separate case, a court in the Red Sea city of Jeddah jailed another Saudi for nine years on a conviction of spreading extremist and "terrorist" ideology on Twitter, the Al-Riyadh daily reported Wednesday.

He was also found guilty of calling for protests to demand the release of detainees held in cases linked to "national security" matters, it said, without identifying him.

A key suspect in the bombing of a housing complex in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 US airmen almost two decades ago has been captured, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

Ahmad Ibrahim al-Mughassil, who is wanted by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, is said to be the head of the Saudi Hezbollah’s military wing, an outlawed organisation whose members are drawn from the kingdom’s Shiite Muslim community.

The 48-year-old was detained in Beirut and sent to Saudi Arabia where he is being interrogated, the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awsat daily said quoting unnamed officials.

US and Saudi military personnel survey the damage to Khobar Towers in Dhahran on June 26  1996

US and Saudi military personnel survey the damage to Khobar Towers in Dhahran on June 26, 1996
, US Department of Defense/AFP

There was no immediate confirmation from the Saudi authorities.

The powerful bomb blast in June 1996, which also wounded more than 370 people, destroyed part of the eight-storey Khobar Towers in the eastern Saudi town of Dhahran.

US prosecutors have said Mughassil drove the explosives-laden truck and parked it outside the military compound.

The newspaper did not say when or how he was captured, but reported he had been “disguised in a way that made identifying him difficult”.

US investigators inspect the site of a truck bomb that exploded outside a US military personnel hous...

US investigators inspect the site of a truck bomb that exploded outside a US military personnel housing complex in Dharhan, Saudi Arabia in June 1996
Jorge Ferrari, AFP/File

The FBI has offered a reward of up to $5 million (4.4 million euros) for information leading directly to his apprehension or conviction.

The Khobar Towers dormitory complex housed US, British, French and Saudi military personnel attached to the nearby King Abdul Aziz airbase.

In a separate case, a court in the Red Sea city of Jeddah jailed another Saudi for nine years on a conviction of spreading extremist and “terrorist” ideology on Twitter, the Al-Riyadh daily reported Wednesday.

He was also found guilty of calling for protests to demand the release of detainees held in cases linked to “national security” matters, it said, without identifying him.

AFP
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