Tareq Ali Mursi
Tareq Ali Mursi was an alleged member of al-Jihad. He was the subject of an extraordinary rendition from South Africa to face trial in Egypt.[1]
In November, lawyers Montasser al-Zayat and Mahmoud Abdul Shafi unsuccessfully argued that he should be released, as there had been no demonstration he had any relationship with the other two men transferred from South Africa, Jamal Shueib and Eid Abdul Samee Abdulsamee, who were accused of participating in the 1995 Attack on the Egyptian Embassy in Pakistan.[2]
In July 1999, he was one of 71 alleged militants connected to the embassy bombing who saw their cases transferred to a military court.[3]
On August 5, 2004 - he was interviewed by Hani al-Sibai over the telephone.[4]
References
- ^ Amnesty International, November 12, 1998 backgrounder
- ^ Arabic News, Three extremists join list of suspects in Pakistan embassy bombing, November 20, 1998
- ^ al-Sharq al-Awsat, Seventy one 'terrorists' referred to military court, July 7, 1999
- ^ Human Rights Watch, Black Hole: The Fate of Islamists Rendered to Egypt, May 2005
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al-Zawahiri ran AJ from 1991 until 2001, when it merged with al-Qaeda
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Vanguards of Conquest |
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The Core of al-Jihad |
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Killed in operations |
Nazih Nushi Rashed, Tarek Abdel-Nabi
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Alleged members of al-Jihad |
Hani al-Sibai, Ali Mohamed, Ahmad Salamah Mabruk, Essam al-Qamari, Muhammad al-Zery, Mahmoud Jaballah, Ibrahim Ismail Allam, Ibrahim Eidarous, Adel Abdel Bary, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, Barakat Fahim Ali Mohamed, Muhammad al-Zery, Salem el-Masri, Sayyed Ahmed Abdel-Maqssuod, Sayyed Ajami, Osama Hassan Ahmed, Saeed Salama, Abdel Fahmi, Issam Alim, Ahmad Isma'il 'Uthman, Mahmud Hisham al-Hennawi, Ali Sayyid Muhamed Mustafa al-Bakri, Abu Muaz al-Masry, Ahmad Ibrahim al-Naggar, Tareq Ali Mursi, Magid Mostafa, Mohammad Hassan Mahmoud, Mohammad Huda, Shawqi Salama Mustafa Atiya, Abu Talal al-Qasimi, Mohamed Hassan Tita, Ameen Yusef al-Domeiry, Khaled Medhet al-Fiqi, Muhammad Abdelrahim al-Sharqawi, Muhammad al-Zawahiri, Yusef Abdel Majeed, Essam Hendawi, Abdel Hadi al-Tunsi, Nabeel al-Bora'i, Essam Hasheesh, Waheed Gamal al-Deen, Hassan Ali, Ismaeel Tantawi, Osman Rabei
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