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Pakistani, U.S. agents interrogate five Americans | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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SARGODHA, Pakistan, (Reuters) – U.S. FBI agents and their Pakistani colleagues interrogated on Friday five young American Muslims who wanted to go to Afghanistan to fight U.S.-led forces, Pakistani officials said.

The case is bound to fan fears in Western countries that the sons of immigrants from Muslim countries are being drawn to Islamist militancy, a process made easier by the Internet.

The five men, students in their 20s from northern Virginia, were detained this week in the city of Sargodha in Punjab province, 190 km (120 miles) southeast of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad.

The case has also again focused attention on nuclear-armed Pakistan’s performance in fighting militants as Washington presses Islamabad to root out Islamist fighters crossing the border to attack U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan.

The five tried to contact militants and stayed in touch with each other through the Internet, Pakistani security officials said, highlighting the difficulty authorities face in trying to track and disrupt plots organised on the Web.

Police in Sargodha had taken the first step towards filing charges with complaints based on laws pertaining to foreigners and the use of computers to organise crime. “A case has been registered against the five for violating Pakistan’s foreigners and cyber acts,” Sargodha police chief Usman Anwar told Reuters.

Pakistani agents and colleagues from the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) were interrogating the five, said a Pakistani security official. “They are still in Sargodha and they are being investigated by us as well as the FBI,” said the official, who declined to be identified.

Officials said two of them were of Pakistani origin, one of Egyptian origin, one of Yemeni origin and one of Eritrean origin.

According to documents issued by the police, the five are named Waqar Hussain Khan, Ahmed Minni, Ramy Zamzam, Aman Yemer and Umar Farooq. Officials said three Pakistani men had also been detained, including two of Farooq’s relatives.

The five men would be dealt with according to Pakistani law, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said. “They will not be deported,” Malik told a news conference. “We will take action according to our law and once our law enforcement agencies or court clears (their cases), only then will we deport them,” he said. They were being investigated for links to militant groups but it was not clear to what extent they had developed contacts. The five had visited a madrasa, or Islamic religious school, linked to the Jaish-e-Mohammad militant group in the southern city of Hyderabad saying they wanted to join jihad, or Muslim holy war, another Pakistani security official said. The school turned them away, he said.

The hapless five had then tried to contact an Islamist charity, the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, linked to the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group, in the city of Lahore. They failed there, too, because they had no guarantor, the official said. “These are five raw men who had been brainwashed,” said the security official. The five were found with maps and had intended to travel through northwest Pakistan to the al Qaeda and Taliban militant stronghold of Miranshah, in the lawless North Waziristan region on the Afghan border. “Their ultimate destination was Afghanistan. They wanted to go to Afghanistan for jihad,” the official said. The suspects were wary about being detected through sending emails so instead they shared a password so different members of their group could access the same email site and read messages saved there as drafts, the first Pakistani official said. “It’s a very difficult job to dismantle such networks which operate through the Internet,” he said.