US greets suspect's release with dismay

PAKISTAN: Pakistan's decision to release a suspect al-Qaeda expert accused of training suicide bombers and plotting to attack…

PAKISTAN:Pakistan's decision to release a suspect al-Qaeda expert accused of training suicide bombers and plotting to attack Heathrow airport met with surprise and dismay in London and Washington yesterday.

An official in London described the Pakistani computer engineer as a "significant individual".

Pakistan's supreme court heard this week that Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan (28) from Karachi, had returned home after three years' detention at the hands of Pakistan's intelligence agencies. His lawyer, Babar Awan, said that all charges had "gone with the wind".

The media has been prevented from interviewing Mr Khan, who remains under tight surveillance. His low-key release contrasted with the clamour that followed his capture in July 2004, which authorities celebrated as a big blow for al-Qaeda.

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Mr Khan was alleged to have been the conduit for scrambled e-mail communications between the al-Qaeda leaders in the tribal belt and the outside world.

A seized laptop contained a "treasure trove" of intelligence, officials said, describing blueprints of potential targets for al-Qaeda, in Britain and the US, including photographs and plans of Heathrow airport and underpasses in London.

His arrest led British police and security service officers to Dhiren Barot, who was imprisoned last year for 40 years for planning a bombing campaign, including a plan to fill expensive cars with explosives and gas cylinders, park them in car parks beneath buildings and then detonate them. It also led to the capture of Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a Tanzanian who allegedly helped bomb American embassies in Africa in 1998.

Mr Khan was reported to have told Pakistani officials about a terrorist network in Britain and how he often relayed messages from Pakistan to the leader of the British cell, described as a top al-Qaeda operative. His release appeared to be a reward for co-operation.

But officials in London expressed disappointment and US officials and analysts said they were dismayed.

"I find it strange and baffling," said Seth Jones, of the Rand Corporation, a Washington thinktank. "It is also deeply reprehensible since Khan was involved in training al-Qaeda operatives. He presents a major threat to the west." But human rights activists questioned whether Mr Khan was really a terrorist mastermind as portrayed. "If he is so dangerous a suspect in the war on terror then why has he not been charged for the last three years?" said Ali Dayan Hasan, of Human Rights Watch.