- Mohammed Haydar Zammar
-
محمد حيدر زمار
Mohammed Haydar ZammarBorn 1961
Aleppo, SyriaArrested October 2001
Morocco
Moroccan policeCitizenship German Detained at Far' Falastin prison, Damascus, Syria Alleged to be a member of Al-Qaeda Status In prison in Far' Falastin Mohammed Haydar Zammar (Arabic: محمد حيدر زمار Muḥammad Ḥaydar Zammār) (born in 1961 in Aleppo, Syria) is a Muslim jihadist who served as an important al-Qaida recruiter.[1] He claims to have recruited many of the organizers of the September 11, 2001 attacks. He is detained in Far'Falastin.
Contents
Early history
Zammar, a German citizen, was born in Syria. At ten he moved to Germany with his family. Even among his very religiously conservative family, Mohammed Zammar impressed many with his extreme devotion at an early age. He became well-known at many of the mosques in Hamburg, Germany. While still in high school, Zammar began to be associated with Jihadists through Mamoun Darkazanli, a fellow Syrian and al-Qaeda financier.
Zammar attended a metalworking college and planned to work for Mercedes-Benz. He worked as a translator in Saudi Arabia, and then took a job as a truck-driver back in Hamburg. But in 1991, he decided to make jihad his full-time job.
He flew to Afghanistan by way of Pakistan and underwent a training program for mujahideen fighters. His training included weapons knowledge, use of explosives, and advanced tactics. He performed well and was moved to an elite training camp near Jalalabad. By the end of the year, he had "graduated" and returned to Hamburg.
Zammar travelled extensively over the next few years. While working as a mechanic, he took long trips to Syria, Jordan, Turkey, and Sweden. In 1995, he traveled to Bosnia to fight there. And in 1996, Zammar visited Afghanistan for a second time, this time to become a formal member of the group called al-Qaeda. He was reported to have been personally invited by Osama bin Laden.
An al-Qaida recruiter
When Zammar returned to Hamburg he became a minor celebrity among the Islamic community. He frequently gave enthusiastic speeches on behalf of bin Laden and other Islamists.[who?] German police began to formally investigate him at this time. Zammar made frequent short trips to Afghanistan throughout this period.
Mohamed Atta, a very conservative Muslim, became friends with Zammar around 1998.[2] (Atta would go on to lead the 9/11 hijackers in their infamous attack.) Zammar has reportedly boasted that he personally recruited Atta and other hijackers into al-Qaida, although this has not been confirmed. Zammar also met frequently with Mounir El Motassadeq around this time.
In 1998 Germany intensified their surveillance of Zammar. He was occasionally trailed, his phone was tapped, and all his calls were recorded. German authorities shared much of this information with the CIA, including Zammar's phone conversations with hijackers Marwan al-Shehhi, Mohamed Atta, Ramzi bin al-Shibh, and Said Bahaji.[3]
Atta, Shehhi, and bin al-Shibh formed the Hamburg cell in November 1998, and Zammar is reported to have been a frequent visitor.[4] Atta became respected as the group's leader, and Zammar was seen more as a valuable conduit for international contacts. Zammar may not have been aware of plans for an attack within the United States.
In the Summer of 1999, U.S. intelligence discovered that Zammar was in direct contact with one of bin Laden's senior operational coordinators. The U.S. apparently did not share this information with German intelligence. Zammar is also known to have met frequently with Said Bahaji in Germany in 2000.
Zammar was living in Boston with his wife and daughter (who was just under two years old) at the time of the September 11th attacks. According to some reports he was collecting welfare there and in Germany at the same time. He is said to have known how to milk the system. He flew out of Boston Logan airport on Swiss Air a week later, along with several other men with which he was acquainted. They gathered on the plane appearing giddy and excited. He and his wife toasted (with orange juice) once the plane took off. The first stop was Zurich airport.
Capture
On October 27, 2001, Zammar traveled to Morocco. Not long afterwards, he was arrested by Moroccan police with the assistance of the U.S. Although he was a German citizen and under investigation by Germany, German intelligence only learned about the arrest from the newspapers in June 2002.
Instead of being deported to the U.S. or Germany, Zammar was secretly sent to Syria for indefinite detention in the notorious Far'Falastin detention center in Damascus. Time Magazine reported: "U.S. officials in Damascus submit written questions to the Syrians, who relay Zammar's answers back. . . State Department officials like the arrangement because it insulates the U.S. government from any torture the Syrians may be applying to Zammar."
On December 15, 2005, it was officially confirmed that German Bundeskriminalamt federal police officers had on at least one occasion participated in Zammar's interrogation in Syria; it was claimed that these officers were unaware of the conditions at the prison. This seems doubtful given that it was widespread knowledge in the intelligence/international politics community, but if referring specifically to the treatment of Zammar, it may or may not be true; it is not known whether Zammar's interrogation by Syria or other parties did or does involve torture and if so, to which extent.
According to Amnesty International, Muhammad Haydar Zammar is a victim of the US-led renditions programme who was convicted in February 2007 after an unfair trial before the Syrian Supreme State Security Court. Amnesty also alleges that he was held in pre-trial detention for almost five years, much of it in incommunicado and solitary confinement, at the notorious Palestine Branch of Military Intelligence in Damascus. During his detention he was tortured and otherwise ill-treated. In June 2007 the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention stated that Muhammad Haydar Zammar was detained arbitrarily and called upon the Syrian authorities to “remedy the situation”. Amnesty International is not aware of the authorities having taken any steps to do so.
See also
External links
- Hamburg's Cauldron of Terror - from the Washington Post
- TERRORBEKAEMPFUNG: Der vergessene Gefangene (by HOLGER STARK) - from Der Spiegel, 47/2005, November 21, 2005
- The Kidnapping of Muhammad Al-Zammar - A Document Archive
Alleged militants in the War on Terror who have lived in Germany Alleged members of al-Qaeda and al-Jihad Mohammed Haydar Zammar · Christian GanczarskiHamburg Cell · September 11 attacks Mohamed Atta · Marwan al-Shehhi · Ziad Jarrah · Ramzi bin al-Shibh · Said Bahaji · Zakariya Essabar · Mounir el-MotassadeqHeld in Guantanamo Bay Murat Kurnaz · Ramzi bin al-ShibhWrongly accused 2006 German train bombing plot 2007 bomb plot in Germany 2011 Frankfurt Airport shooting Arid UkaCategories:- 1961 births
- Living people
- Islamist terrorism in Germany
- German al-Qaeda members
- Syrian al-Qaeda members
- Alleged al-Qaeda recruiters
- German prisoners and detainees
- Prisoners and detainees of Syria
- People from Aleppo
- People subject to extraordinary rendition by the United States
- Far' Falastin prisoners
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