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Sunday, 16 September, 2001, 15:08 GMT 16:08 UK
Second US arrest in terror probe
FBI director is heading the biggest manhunt in history
A second person has been arrested as part of the huge investigation into Tuesday's terror attacks in the United States.
The unidentified man was taken into custody in an apartment in New Jersey across the Hudson River from New York, said Jersey City Police Director James Carter. No details of any charges have been disclosed, but the man was detained on a similar "material witness" warrant to a man arrested on Friday in connection with the attacks.
Investigators say the suspect arrested on Saturday, described as a man of "Middle Eastern origin", may have useful information on the hijacking of aircraft used in the New York and Washington attacks. Two other men are reported to have been picked up in Fort Worth, Texas, and flown to New York for questioning.
Investigators have identified 19 men they say carried out the attacks, which destroyed the World Trade Center and badly damaged the Pentagon.
(Click here to see where hijackers were on planes)
The FBI said most of the suspects, all presumed dead, had addresses in the US and a number of them were qualified pilots.
According to the Los Angeles Times, FBI agents acting on a tip from the Central Intelligence Agency, began looking for two of the Pentagon hijackers on 21 August.
Other reports say one of the men had been seen at a meeting in Malaysia with people suspected of being oinvolved in the attack on the USS Cole warship, which was bombed in Yemen last year, killing 17 US servicemen. That attack has been blamed on Osama Bin Laden, chief suspect in the attacks on New York and Washington. Since Tuesday, the bureau has been alerted to more than 36,000 potential leads and has interviewed hundreds of people. Four thousand FBI agents are now working on the investigation, and there is concern that more terrorists are already in the country planning further attacks. A list of more than 100 names has been circulated to airlines, police departments and border patrols. About 25 people questioned in connection with the attacks are still in custody suspected of immigration offences. Those held are among the list of more than 100 people the FBI believes could help with its investigation. Worldwide hunt German authorities say two of the men named by the FBI as hijackers were one-time Hamburg residents, while in Switzerland the authorities say they are searching for evidence that the hijackers may have used the country as a transit point. The National Security Adviser of the Philippines, Roilo Golez has revealed that one of three Omani nationals who had been arrested for photographing the US embassy in Manila was a passenger on one of the hijacked planes. The Omanis were released, but their hotel room was later found to contain traces of explosives. Belgian prosecutors have arrested a man described as belonging to a "radical Islamic movement" on suspicion of attempted attacks on US interests in Europe. In a related operation, Dutch police have arrested suspected Islamic militants in Rotterdam. |
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