Los Angeles Times

N.Y. terrorist plotter dies in federal prison

Omar Abdul Rahman was convicted of planning attacks in the U.S. in the 1990s.

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BUTNER, N.C. — Omar Abdul Rahman, who was convicted of plotting terrorist attacks in the United States in the 1990s, has died. He was 78.

Kenneth McKoy of the Federal Correction­al Complex in Butner, N.C., said Abdul Rahman died at 5:40 a.m. He suffered from diabetes and coronary artery disease and had been at the complex for seven years.

Abdul Rahman was a key spiritual leader for a generation of Islamic militants and became a symbol for radicals during a decade in American prisons.

Abdul Rahman was the leader of one of Egypt’s most feared militant groups, the Gamaa Islamiya, which led a campaign of violence aimed at bringing down former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

Abdul Rahman fled Egypt to the United States in 1990 and began teaching in a New Jersey mosque. A circle of his followers were convicted in the Feb. 26, 1993, truck bombing of New York’s World Trade Center that killed six people — eight years before Al Qaeda’s suicide plane hijackers brought the towers down.

Later in 1993, Abdul Rahman was arrested on charges of conspiracy to carry out a string of bombings against the United Nations, the Lincoln and Holland tunnels, the George Washington Bridge and other New York landmarks.

But since his imprisonme­nt, Abdul Rahman had been seen more as a symbolic leader than a practical one. His Gamaa Islamiya, which led a wave of violence in the 1990s, was crushed a

decade ago, and its leaders, jailed in Egypt, declared a truce.

Abdul Rahman’s activities predated Osama bin Laden’s formation of Al Qaeda in the late 1990s. But he was an influentia­l figure in the generation of Islamic extremists that emerged from Egypt over the last two decades.

Born in Gamalia, Egypt, Abdul Rahman was blind by the age of 10 months. Still, he said in his autobiogra­phy, he memorized the Koran by age 11.

He attended Cairo’s Al Azhar University, a center of Islamic scholarshi­p, and quickly ran into trouble as he turned toward a takfir ideology — a radical interpreta­tion of Islam that holds that those who don’t follow a strict version of sharia, or Islamic law, are infidels.

After the death of Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser in 1970, he told followers not to pray for the soul of the leader of secular Arab nationalis­m because he was an infidel. That got him eight months in prison.

Before moving to the U.S., Abdul Rahman went to Afghanista­n and Pakistan, where he became a spiritual leader for the mujahedin, then fighting Soviet troops with help from the CIA.

Abdul Rahman arrived in the U.S. in 1990, even though he was on a list of suspected terrorists and thus banned from the country. He was given permanent residence status under the name Omar Ahmed Ali.

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? OMAR ABDUL RAHMAN, right, in New York in 1993. Followers of the cleric carried out a bombing at the World Trade Center that killed six on Feb. 26, 1993.
AFP/Getty Images OMAR ABDUL RAHMAN, right, in New York in 1993. Followers of the cleric carried out a bombing at the World Trade Center that killed six on Feb. 26, 1993.

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