US and Iraqi troops has detained an al-Qaida financier who is
suspected of receiving US$100 million from al-Qaida sympathizers,
the US military said on Thursday.
During an operation in Baghdad's central neighborhood of Kindi
on Tuesday, the troops detained the suspect who is "believed to
have received US$100,000,000 this summer from terrorist supporters
who cross the Iraqi border illegally or fly into Iraq from Italy,
Syria and Egypt," the US military said in a statement.
The detainee is suspected of handing over 50,000 dollars a month
to al-Qaida "using his leather merchant business as a front to
smuggle weapons and explosives from surrounding countries,"
according to the statement.
It added that intelligence reports said that the suspect has
stores in Iraq's Fallujah, Syria and Jordan respectively.
In addition, the financier believed to be involved in purchasing
explosives that were used in destroying the golden dome of one of
the most revered Shiite shrines in Samarra in 2006.
He was also suspected of involving in another attack on June 13
this year, which destroyed the two marinates of the al-Askari
shrine, according to the statement.
The two attacks were widely seen as the thin end of the wedge
that sparked Iraq's sectarian strife that killed dozens of
thousands of Iraqis.
The suspect is also wanted to the US forces for allegedly
shooting a US patrol in Baghdad's western district of Mansour in
April, which killed three US soldiers and wounded another, said the
statement.
(Xinhua News Agency October 5, 2007)