The Swedish citizen who on Wednesday evening was reported to have been killed by US forces in Iraq was Abu Qaswara - according to the UN and EU one of the most senior al-Qaeda leaders in the country.
Abu Qaswara was killed in the city of Mosul in northern Iraq on October 5th, reported Reuters. Born in Morocco and known also as Abu Sara, Abu Qaswara was described by the US as the second-in-command in al-Qaeda in Iraq and the leader of the organisation's groups in the north of the country.
Details about Qaswara's death were discussed at a press conference in Baghdad on Wednesday by US Rear Admiral Patrick Driscoll, a spokesperson for the Multi-National Force in Iraq.
According to Sweden's security police, Säpo, the man died in a fire fight with American forces when they tried to capture him.
"We've known about the man since the 1990s. He's suspected of having led an Islamist network which has supported terrorism in Afghanistan, Iraq, and North Africa," said Säpo spokesperson Tina Israelsson to the TT news agency.
Among other activities, the network is believed to have sent jihadist volunteer fighters to Iraq, with the man having used Sweden as a base of operations.
"He came to Sweden in the middle of the 1980s, became a Swedish citizen in the mid-1990s and was here until 2006. In May 2006 he travelled to Iraq and hasn't returned since," said Israelsson.
(more)
Source: The Local (English)
Abu Qaswara was killed in the city of Mosul in northern Iraq on October 5th, reported Reuters. Born in Morocco and known also as Abu Sara, Abu Qaswara was described by the US as the second-in-command in al-Qaeda in Iraq and the leader of the organisation's groups in the north of the country.
Details about Qaswara's death were discussed at a press conference in Baghdad on Wednesday by US Rear Admiral Patrick Driscoll, a spokesperson for the Multi-National Force in Iraq.
According to Sweden's security police, Säpo, the man died in a fire fight with American forces when they tried to capture him.
"We've known about the man since the 1990s. He's suspected of having led an Islamist network which has supported terrorism in Afghanistan, Iraq, and North Africa," said Säpo spokesperson Tina Israelsson to the TT news agency.
Among other activities, the network is believed to have sent jihadist volunteer fighters to Iraq, with the man having used Sweden as a base of operations.
"He came to Sweden in the middle of the 1980s, became a Swedish citizen in the mid-1990s and was here until 2006. In May 2006 he travelled to Iraq and hasn't returned since," said Israelsson.
(more)
Source: The Local (English)
No comments:
Post a Comment