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Mosul suicide bomber was Saudi medical student: reportBy Evan Kohlmann
Mosul suicide bomber was Saudi medical student: report CAIRO - The suicide bomber who killed 22 people when he blew himself up in a US mess hall in Mosul, Iraqi, was a Saudi medical student, an Arab newspaper reported Monday. Saudi-owned Asharq Al-Awsat identified him as 20-year-old Ahmed Said Ahmed al-Ghamdi, citing unnamed friends of the mans father. The friends said members of an Iraqi resistance group contacted al-Ghamdis father to tell him his son was the suicide bomber who carried out the Dec. 21 attack, the deadliest on an American installation in Iraq. The Associated Press was unable to reach Saudi security officials for comment despite several phone calls on Monday. The
US-led coalition that toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein has faced
fierce resistance, most of it carried out by Saddam loyalists or Iraqi
nationalists. Some of the deadliest attacks, though, have been blamed
on foreign Muslim extremists. US
officials have said their preliminary investigation indicates the
bomber was dressed in an Iraqi military uniform - but was not an Iraqi
soldier - when he slipped into a mess tent packed with soldiers eating
lunch in northern Iraq. The
father refused to discuss the suicide bombing, but told the newspaper
his son had gone to Iraq to fight the Americans and had died there. The
family held a mourning ceremony the paper said. It did not say when the
ceremony was held or where in Saudi Arabia the family lived. The
paper did not name the Iraqi resistance group. But Ansar al-Sunnah, a
radical Islamic Iraqi group that has been active in northern Iraq,
claimed responsibility for the mess hall attack. In a videotape posted
on the Web, Ansar al-Sunnah identified the suicide bomber as Abu Omar
al-Musali - an apparent nom de guerre meaning Abu Omar of Mosul. The
man identified as Abu Omar al-Musali appeared in the Web video wearing
an explosives-laden vest, but did not speak. Another man, speaking in
an Iraqi accent, described how the operation had been planned. A
subsequent segment showed what appeared to have been the attack. Asharq
al-Awsat said al-Ghamdi started studying medicine in Sudan when his
father worked and lived there. Al-Ghamdi stayed to complete his studies
when his family returned to Saudi Arabia, the paper reported, without
saying when the family left. It
said the father said he learned Dec. 16 that his son had withdrawn all
the money left in a Sudanese bank account for him and later received a
phone call from his son telling him that he was in Iraq to fight the
Americans. The al-Ghamdis are a large Saudi clan. Three al-Ghamdis were among the Sept. 11 hijackers. Notes from Evan Kohlmann: A friend and supporter of Ahmed al-Ghamdi responded to this story: "I
carry on and confirm to you the news concerning the martyrdom of Ahmad
Said Omar Al-Ghamdi, who carried out the Mosul operation and previously
was studying in Sudan at the Medical School of the Umm Durman Islamic
University. His real name is written this way, and it is not Ahmad
Said Ahmad Al-Ghamdi as was reported in As-Sharq al-Awsat. Also, he
was studying at the Islamic University in Umm Durman and not at
Khartoum University... His father was formerly the charge d'affaires at
the Saudi embassy in Khartoum, but returned to Saudi Arabia sometime
ago at the end of his appointment period. However, Ahmad continued to
study here until he disappeared suddenly after informing his friends
that he was going back to Saudi Arabia.... Allah have mercy on him, he
was humble, well-mannered, and very polite. He reached great success
in his studies... [at the] Faculty of Medicine at the Islamic
University of Umm Durman. The university is marked by its Islamic
theme, without the typical mixture found at other universities between
the material and legitimate sciences [science and religion]. While at
the university, he began to show signs of his committment, growing out
his beard, and becoming persistent in studying the lessons of Islamic
clerics and shaykhs. The last time I saw him was in June 2004 at the
Hijra Mosque in the Riyadh neighborhood of Khartoum." On
a related note, the Ansar al-Sunnah Army has also released a videotaped
"martyr will" of "Abu Abdullah al-Muhajir", identified as responsible
for the January 3, 2005 attempted suicide bombing attack on the Baghdad
headquarters of Iyad Allawi's Iraqi National Accord Party that killed
four bystanders. See http://www.globalterroralert.com/video/0105/ansarsunnah-martyrwill.wmv.
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