Essam Marzouk
Essam Marzouk | |
---|---|
Born | 1960 Cairo, Egypt |
Other name(s) | Essameddin Hafez,[1]Isam al-Din Hafez,[2]Fawzi Mesit Ibn Fahd Al Harbi,[3]Abu Thir El Masri[3]Adnan[3] |
Alleged to be a member of | Vanguards of Conquest |
Charge(s) | participating in a terrorist organization |
Penalty | 15 years imprisonment |
Status | imprisoned |
An Egyptian resident of British Columbia,[4] Essam Hafez Mohammed Marzouk (عصام حافظ محمد مرزوق) arrived in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in 1993 as a refugee fleeing persecution in Pakistan.[5][6] He was one of 14 people subjected to extraordinary rendition by the CIA prior to the 2001 declaration of a War on Terror.[7]
In 1999, he was convicted as a member of the Vanguards of Conquest, a precursor to al-Jihad.[8][9] The Egyptian government says that he belongs to the terrorist group al-Jihad. He is currently serving 15 years in an Egyptian prison for supporting terrorism.
Life
Born to a wealthy engineer in Cairo, Marzouk grew up in a 5th-storey apartment at 2 Doctor El-Mahroky Street in the suburban Mohandeseen district of Cairo.[4] Following his service in the Egyptian Army, he told his father he wanted to study in the United States, but instead moved to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border at the age of 19.[4][10]
In 1986-87, he worked as an ambulance driver at the Red Crescent hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan where he met Egyptian-Canadian Ahmed Khadr,[11][12] and later worked with the Muslim World League.[4]
From 1988-1993 he is alleged to have run an Afghan training camp for al-Jihad.[9]
In Canada
"Bin Laden's B.C helper" National Post October 14, 2005[4]
In 1993, Marzouk acquired two fake Saudi passports and flew to Khartoum, Sudan on May 23. Once there, he acquired tickets to fly from Damascus, Syria to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, connecting with Lufthansa Flight 492 in Frankfurt, Germany.[4]
Dressed as a Saudi sheikh and calling himself Fawzi Al-Harbi,[4] he was arrested in Canada when immigration official Gordon Peterson became suspicious of his story of being an "Arab volunteer" in Afghanistan and Pakistan, ordered a search of his luggage and found his fake identity cards.[10][11][13] Ali Mohamed had travelled north from California to meet Marzouk at the airport. Airport security noticed him waiting for "Al-Harbi" and questioned him, before releasing him. While in prison, on charges of using a forged document, fraud and illegally entering the country, Marzouk applied for refugee status, claiming he feared religious and political persecution in Egypt.[4] He was once shown a TIME magazine article about the World Trade Center bombing in 1993, and asked if he knew any of the people involved, in the presence of lawyer Phil Rankin.[12]
Six months after his arrest, Mohamed returned from a trip to the Sudan where he met with Osama bin Laden, and brought Abul-Dahab with him. Dahab later told Egyptian interrogators he had withdrawn $3,000 from a Californian bank account on orders of bin Laden himself,[14] to offer as bail money to lawyer Phil Rankin.[14] The pair hoped to have Marzouk released and possibly smuggle him into the United States.[15] Mohamed was viewed suspiciously and subsequently detained by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) himself. However, after a brief phone call with U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agent John Zent, Mohamed was identified as a CIA agent.[16] Marzouk spent nearly a year in detention in Canada before his refugee status was confirmed and he was released,[14] although Canadian authorities prevented him from being given permanent resident status due to their suspicions,[17] and he was instead granted only refugee status on December 12, 1994.[4][9]
Upon his week, Rankin allowed him to move briefly into his family home, describing him as "very polite" and allowing him to babysit his young son.[4]
Marzouk married a Canadian woman named Yasmine,[12] who bore him a child.[10] He was tentatively employed as a truck driver, and was living on social assistance with a net worth of approximately C$20,000 and was being physically followed by Canadian intelligence agents.[14][17] He made a number of phone calls to Mohammad Zeki Mahjoub's Toronto home,[17] although the latter denied knowing him in a 1998 interrogation.[3] When Mahjoub was later arrested, he was carrying a slip of paper with Marzouk's former address, 105 10277 135th St. Box 150 Surrey B.C. V3T 4C, printed on it, and later confessed he had indeed known him.[3]
In 1997, the FBI found Marzouk listed in an address book taken from Wadih El-Hage's Nairobi house.[18] In 1998 he was introduced to Mohammad Zeki Mahjoub at the house of Ahmed Khadr's in-laws in Toronto.[9]
That year, Marzouk co-founded an import-export business named 4-U Enterprises with his "best friend" in Canada, former Egyptian Amr Hamed who shared his love of sports.[6][12] The two shared their faith openly, and would sometimes disappear into the forests of the coastal mountains for days at a time as a spiritual retreat to memorise the Quran.[12] In February 1998, he sold off his company assets,[12]
In May 1998, Marzouk visited Ahmed Khadr, from the hospitals in Peshawar, at home, where he was introduced to Mohammad Zeki Mahjoub, a member of the Vanguards of Conquest.[9]
Arrest and imprisonment
After five years, Marzouk left his Canadian wife and child in 1998, and flew to Turkey, where he is believed to have met with Ahmad Agiza before returning to Eastern Afghanistan.[12][19] After his friend Hamed was killed in the American bombing of an Afghan training camp on August 20, as retaliation for the African embassy bombings,[20][21] Marzouk flew to Dubai and onward to Europe, before quickly doubling back to Dubai and booking a flight to Azerbaijan.[12]
In August, a wiretapped phonecall tipped off the Israeli Mossad that a rendez-vous between Ihab Saqr and an Iranian MOIS official was planned in Baku, Azerbaijan. Without a bureau in Azerbaijan, they contacted the American CIA, who allowed a Canadian-raised Mossad agent to unofficially tag along as seven or eight CIA officers based in Frankfurt oversaw a local police raid on the Baku hotel room on August 20.[10][22][23]
When the Azeri police received confirmation that Saqr was in his hotelroom drinking coffee with others, they stormed the room grabbing all three people they found present and brought them still barefoot to the police station. It was now realised that the Iranian official hadn't yet shown up, and they had instead arrested Saqr, as well as Ahmad Salama Mabruk and Marzouk, who was wearing a "shabby business suit".[10][24] They were brought to the police station, where the Mossad agent says the police "beat the crap out of them".[10]
Marzouk was extradited to Egypt, who initially denied they had him - during which time he alleges he was tortured. He was accused of acting as a trainer to two of the embassy bombers. He was put before a military tribunal on March 16, 1999, as part of the Returnees from Albania trial, with Montasser al-Zayat as his lawyer.[10] He was sentenced to 15 years' hard labour for being an alleged member of al-Jihad.[6][19] As of 2008, he is still believed to be incarcerated although there is no absolute proof.[3]
In November 2001, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police investigated claims that an "al-Qaeda office" in Kabul had business cards reading 4-U Enterprises - Amr H. Hamed and included an address for a rented postal box in a B.C. convenience store.[6][21]
In their 2008 report concerning Mahmoud Jaballah, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) misidentified Amr Hamed and Marzouk as being the same person.[9] In their 2008 report concerning Mohammad Zeki Mahjoub, they reported that Marzouk was convicted in absentia in Egypt in 1998, although he was not.[3]
References
- ^ Halawi, Jailan. Al-Ahram, Pre-emptive strike against Jihad Archived 2008-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, June 2–9, 1999
- ^ Webman, Esther. Political Islam at the Close of the Twentieth Century Archived 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine, p. 14
- ^ a b c d e f g CSIS, Summary of the Security Intelligence Report concerning Mohammad Zeki Mahjoub
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bell, Stewart (October 13, 2005). "Bin Laden's B.C. Helper". National Post. Retrieved March 8, 2018.
- ^ Global Terrorism Analysis: Terrorism Monitor, Volume 3, Issue 15 Archived 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine, July 28, 2005
- ^ a b c d CBC, "B.C. refugee may have terrorist links", November 15, 2001
- ^ Mother Jones, Disappearing Act: Rendition by the Numbers, March 3, 2008
- ^ Bell, Stewart (November 26, 2005). "Bin Laden WMD chief once lived in B.C." National Post. Archived from the original on November 12, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f Canadian Security Intelligence Service, Summary of the Security Intelligence Report concerning Mahmoud Jaballah[permanent dead link], February 22, 2008
- ^ a b c d e f g Bell, Stewart (October 15, 2005). "Mossad's Canuck gets his man". National Post. Retrieved March 8, 2018.
- ^ a b Michelle Shephard, "Guantanamo's Child", 2008.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bell, Stewart (October 14, 2005). "A model life, a model operative". National Post. Retrieved March 8, 2018.
- ^ Bell, Stewart. National Post, "Under Western Eyes", October 14, 2005
- ^ a b c d Bell, Stewart. National Post, "Report says bin Laden paid bail in Canada"
- ^ Lance, Peter. "Triple Cross", 2008
- ^ Oziewicz, Estanislao. The Globe and Mail, "Canada freed top al-Qaeda operative", November 23, 2001
- ^ a b c Shephard, Michelle. Toronto Star, "Branded as Terrorist Threat, Men Languish in Toronto Jail", July 17, 2004
- ^ Bell, Stewart. National Post, "US Embassy Bombers had Canadian Ties", March 19, 2002
- ^ a b Burke, Jason. The Observer, "al-Qaeda's trail of terror", November 18, 2001
- ^ National Post, "Dozens of Canadians join Jihad terror camps", October 22, 2003
- ^ a b Salopek, Paul. Chicago Tribune, "A chilling look into terror's lair", November 18, 2001
- ^ Salah, Muhammad. Al-Hayah, "Bin Ladin Front Reportedly Bought CBW from E. Europe", April 20, 1999
- ^ Salah, Muhammad. Al-Hayah, "US Said Interrogating Jihadist Over CBW", April 21, 1999
- ^ Ross, Michael and Jonathan Kay. "The Volunteer: The Incredible True Story of an Israeli Spy on the Trail of International Terrorists", 2007. pp 214-224