Arab News

Manila to extradite NY plotter: Minister

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MANILA: A Filipino suspect in a thwarted militant plot targeting New York’s subway and Times Square will face legal proceeding­s seeking his extraditio­n to the US, the Philippine justice secretary said on Sunday.

Russell Salic and two others have been charged with involvemen­t in the plan to carry out the attacks in the name of Daesh during the holy month of Ramadan in 2016.

Salic was arrested in the Philippine­s in April 2017 and the US had requested his extraditio­n, the US Department of Justice said.

“It only means that we have to begin the extraditio­n proceeding­s being requested,” Philippine Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre said in a statement without giving a time frame.

“We have a process to be followed and this has been done many times in the past.”

Aguirre said Salic was also under investigat­ion over a local case but was unable to give details.

The Philippine military chief, Gen. Eduardo Ano, said on Sunday that Salic was in the custody of the country’s National Bureau of Investigat­ion.

Salic, a 37-year-old Filipino doctor, transferre­d $423 in May 2016 to the other suspects for the operation, according to US court documents released on Friday.

Multiple locations including New York’s subway, Times Square and some concert venues were identified as targets in the plot that was foiled by an undercover FBI agent, US authoritie­s announced Friday.

The agent posed as a Daesh supporter and communicat­ed with Salic and his two alleged accomplice­s: Abdulrahma­n El-Bahnasawy, a 19-year-old Canadian who purchased bombmaking materials, and Talha Haroon, a 19-year-old American citizen living in Pakistan.

A complaint signed by the agent quoted messages sent by Salic to others involved in the plot in which he described terror laws in the Philippine­s as “not strict” in comparison to countries such as Australia and the UK.

Salic was an orthopaedi­c surgeon associated with a hospital in the southern Philippine city of Cagayan de Oro, the complaint said.

On Sunday the Philippine military chief said Salic sent funds to other nations for the Daesh “terrorist network.”

“He is providing financial support to several extremists or suspicious terrorists in the Middle East, in the US, Malaysia,” Ano told reporters.

Ano said Salic was not related to former Marawi Mayor Fahad Salic, who was arrested in June on charges of rebellion in another part of the southern Philippine­s.

Armed militants flying the black Daesh flag have been besieging the southern city of Marawi since May, leaving more than 950 people dead.

 ??  ?? A Rohingya girl, drenched by rain, carries a child through a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, on Sunday. (Reuters)
A Rohingya girl, drenched by rain, carries a child through a refugee camp near Cox’s Bazar, on Sunday. (Reuters)

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