Arab Times

Two ‘Pakistanis’ charged with terror in US

Qazis plan to use weapons of mass destructio­n

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MIAMI, Dec 1, (AP): Two men of Pakistani descent have been charged with plotting to provide material support to terrorists and to use a weapon of mass destructio­n within the US, federal prosecutor­s said Friday.

The men were identified as brothers Sheheryar Alam Qazi, 30, and 20-year-old Raees Alam Qazi. Both are naturalize­d US citizens originally from Pakistan and both were arrested in the Fort Lauderdale area, prosecutor­s said.

Few details about the plot were provided by prosecutor­s or outlined in a brief, three-page grand jury indictment. Authoritie­s said the case was not an FBI sting operation but declined any additional comment.

“Any potential threat posed by these two individual­s has been disrupted,” said Miami US Attorney Wifredo Ferrer.

In Washington, Justice Department national security spokesman Dean Boyd called the case “an ongoing, very active investigat­ion” but provided no specifics.

The indictment charges that the two provided money, property, lodging, communicat­ions equipment and other support for a conspiracy to obtain a weapon of mass destructio­n between July 2011 and this week. The goal was to “use a weapon of mass destructio­n (explosives) against persons and property within the United States,” prosecutor­s said in a news release.

It wasn’t clear whether the conspirato­rs actually did obtain explosives or what their potential targets might have been.

The Qazi brothers had initial court appearance­s Friday, but court-appointed attorneys for the two did not immediatel­y respond to emails seeking comment. An arraignmen­t and bail hearing is scheduled for Dec 7.

They are both charged with conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, which carries a maximum 15-year prison sentence, and with conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destructio­n. The maximum is life in prison for that charge.

South Florida has seen several high-profile terrorism cases, including the conviction of al-Qaeda operative Jose Padilla and the conviction­s of five men accused of plotting to join forces with al-Qaeda to destroy a landmark Chicago skyscraper and bomb FBI offices in several cities.

More recently, a Miami Muslim cleric and one of his sons are facing trial on charges they provided thousands of dollars in financial support to the Pakistani Taleban terrorism group.

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