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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 25, 2003
WITH KEY FIGURE IN 9/11 REPORT LIVING IN SAUDI ARABIA,
SCHUMER URGES WHITE HOUSE TO PRESSURE SAUDIS TO TURN HIM OVER
Report finds new links between Saudi agent and two of the
Sept 11 hijackers; FBI had previously dismissed connections between
the agent and terrorism
A key figure in the 9/11 report that was released yesterday is
reportedly living in Saudi Arabia and should be brought back to
the United States for further questioning in light of new evidence
linking him to two of the hijackers and al-Qaeda, US Senator Charles
Schumer said today. In a letter
being sent to President Bush today, Schumer urged the Administration
to use its influence with the Saudi Royal family to get them to
turn the figure, Omar al-Bayoumi, to US authorities.
"The link between al-Bayoumi and the hijackers is the best
evidence yet that part of official Saudi Arabia might have been
involved in the attacks," Schumer said. "If the Saudi
Royal family is as committed to fighting terrorism as it claims,
it will turn this guy over to US officials immediately so that we
can finally get to the bottom of his role in the attacks and his
links to al Qaeda. While it's great that the Saudis are aggressively
investigating who was responsible for the attacks in Ryadh, it's
time for them to be just as aggressive in the 9/11 probe."
Although the FBI dismissed any link between al-Bayoumi and terrorism
in January of 2000, the report released yesterday by the Joint Select
Committee on Intelligence linked him to two of the 9/11 hijackers,
the Saudi government, as well as al-Qaeda. According to the report,
al-Bayoumi was a key associate of two of the 9/11 hijackers and
provided them with financial assistance. It also said he may have
been an agent of the Saudi government. At around the same time the
FBI was dismissing links between al-Bayoumi and terrorism, he apparently
had a "closed door" meeting at the Saudi Consulate in
Los Angeles after which he proceeded directly to a restaurant to
meet future 9/11 hijackers Khalid Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi.
In addition, one of the FBI’s best sources in San Diego identified
al-Bayoumi as an intelligence officer for Saudi Arabia or another
foreign power while news reports say al-Bayoumi was employed by
the Saudi Ministry of Defense and Aviation. Since September 11,
the FBI has learned that al-Bayoumi also had connections to individuals
associated with al-Qaeda.
Despite this evidence identifying him as a central figure in the
relationship between Saudi Arabia and the hijackers, American law
enforcement officials have reportedly still not questioned al-Bayoumi
directly. With al-Bayoumi having returned to Saudi Arabia shortly
before the September 11 attacks, it is unlikely that they will be
able to do so unless the Saudis turn him over to US authorities.
"Given the revelations of the Joint Inquiry's report, it is
obvious that there are many important questions about Saudi Arabia's
connections to 9-11 that only al-Bayoumi can answer. I respectfully
urge you to do all that is in your power to convince the Saudis
to hand over al-Bayoumi to the FBI so that the unanswered questions
surrounding 9–11 can be resolved," Schumer wrote to the
President.
Yesterday, Schumer criticized the Bush Administration for keeping
28 pages of the report allegedly dealing with the Saudis classified.
He said the White House has "a systematic strategy of coddling
and cover-up when it comes to the Saudis... The Administration’s
whole policy toward Saudi Arabia is backward and needs to make a
180-degree turn immediately. Declassifying the 28-page section would
be a good first step."
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