Al-Qaida suspect handed over to U.S.

Pakistan reports releasing Libyan

? Pakistan has handed over to the United States senior al-Qaida suspect Abu Farraj al-Libbi, who was wanted for two assassination attempts against President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, officials said Monday.

Musharraf’s spokesman, Maj. Gen. Shaukat Sultan, confirmed that the president told a newspaper during a visit to the United Arab Emirates that al-Libbi had been handed over recently, without specifying exactly when or where he was sent.

“The president has said that he (al-Libbi) has been handed over to U.S. authorities,” Sultan told The Associated Press.

Some officials have described al-Libbi as al-Qaida’s No. 3 leader, after Osama bin Laden and Egyptian surgeon Ayman al-Zawahri. However, he does not appear on the FBI list of the world’s most-wanted terrorists, and his exact role in al-Qaida is murky.

He was arrested May 2 after a shootout in northwestern Pakistan.

An intelligence official said al-Libbi was whisked out of Pakistan with U.S. officials aboard an airplane “a few days ago.” The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the clandestine nature of his job, did not know where al-Libbi was taken.

The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad said it had no information on the case, and the U.S. military in neighboring Afghanistan – a possible detention or transit point for suspects from Pakistan – said it could not “confirm or deny” whether al-Libbi had passed through the country.

The CIA, FBI and Justice Department all declined to comment.

On May 31, Musharraf told CNN that Pakistan would hand al-Libbi, who is a Libyan, to the United States.

In an interview with United Arab Emirates daily al-Ittihad, he confirmed that had happened.

“Yes, we turned Abu Farraj al-Libbi over to the United States recently, and we don’t want people like him in our country,” Musharraf was quoted as saying.

The Pakistani leader did not provide any other details.

In Pakistan, al-Libbi was wanted for allegedly masterminding two attempts on Musharraf’s life in December 2003. The president was unhurt, but 17 people died in the second attack.

The assassination attempts carry a maximum penalty in Pakistan of death by hanging. The personal nature of the attacks led many to believe Musharraf would seek to try al-Libbi here.