This Article is From Aug 20, 2015

Al Qaeda Terrorists Got Pakistani ID Cards With Just $100 Bribes

Al Qaeda Terrorists Got Pakistani ID Cards With Just $100 Bribes

File Photo of Al Qaeda Members.

Pakistani authorities are investigating officials at the national identity database for allegedly issuing ID cards to terrorists, including some linked to Al-Qaeda, in return for bribes as small as $100.

The country's main spy service, the Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI) uncovered the alleged corrupt practices at the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) during ongoing anti-terrorism operations, according to official documents.

"It has been found that many NADRA officials are involved in facilitating miscreants and terrorists in obtaining fake identity," said ISI correspondence seen by news agency AFP.

Adnan El Shukrijumah, a senior Al-Qaeda leader wanted by the US over a 2009 plot to attack the New York subway system, was among those who obtained a Pakistani ID card by bribing officials, the documents said.

Shukrijumah, who was born in Saudi Arabia and spent some years in the United States, was killed in December 2014 during a Pakistan army operation in South Waziristan tribal area close to Afghanistan.

The intelligence probe has named about 40 NADRA officials involved in issuing the fake paperwork in Karachi, including a retired army brigadier and a retired colonel.

In its own investigation into the racket, the Federal Investigation Agency found more than 50,000 national identity cards had been issued to illegal immigrants, most of them Afghans.

Last year Pakistan launched a major crackdown on militants after suffering more than a decade of bomb and gun attacks by homegrown Islamist extremists.

A military offensive against Taliban and Al-Qaeda hideouts in the northwest has been accompanied by what the authorities have called "intelligence-led" operations in cities around the country.
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