Man behind Manhattan, New Jersey bombings has links with Pakistan

The Afghan-origin terror suspect in the bombings in Manhattan and New Jersey had travelled to Pakistan’s Quetta, a stronghold of the Taliban, and was questioned every time he returned to the US but was not on the radar, American officials said.
Man behind Manhattan, New Jersey bombings has links with Pakistan

NEW YORK: The Afghan-origin terror suspect in the bombings in Manhattan and New Jersey had travelled to Pakistan’s Quetta, a stronghold of the Taliban, and was questioned every time he returned to the US but was not on the radar, American officials said.

Ahmad Khan Rahami, a 28-year-old naturalised American citizen of Afghan descent was charged with five counts of attempted murder of a law enforcement officer and on two unlawful weapon possession counts, Park announced. A judge set bail at $5.2 million. Investigators are probing whether he was radicalised overseas before returning to the US in 2014.

In 2011, Rahami spent several weeks in Quetta, considered a stronghold of the Taliban and married a Pakistani woman, according to a law enforcement official who reviewed his travel and immigration record, CNN reported on Tuesday.

Upon his return to the US, he had to go through secondary screening for visiting an area of Pakistan known for its Taliban presence. At that time, he told immigration officials he was visiting family and attending his uncle’s wedding and renewing his Pakistani visa, officials said. In 2013, Rahami went to Pakistan and remained there for a year.

His brother also travelled to Pakistan around the same time and posted on Facebook that they heard seven bomb blasts over 24 hours at one point in Quetta, the report said. Official said Rahami travelled by car to Afghanistan from Quetta.

When he returned to the US, he was once again taken into secondary questioning but told officials he was visiting his wife, as well as his uncles and aunts. Each time Rahami was taken to secondary screening, he satisfied whatever concerns immigration officials had. He was questioned every time he returned to the US, as is standard procedure, but was not on the radar as someone who might have been radicalised, the official said.

In 2014, Rahami contacted Congressman Albio Sires’ office from Islamabad for his wife’s passport which was expired. Once it was renewed, she became pregnant and officials told her they would not give a visa until she had the baby. Rahami, who became a naturalised US citizen in 2011, once said the consulate told him to go back to Karachi, but he claimed it was too dangerous to go there. Rahami’s family, who runs a 24- hour chicken restaurant, has a history of clashes with neighbours.

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