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Said Bahaji

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Native name
  
سعيد بحجي

Nationality
  

Citizenship
  
Name
  
Said Bahaji

Said Bahaji Passport Reveals a Suspected Terrorist39s Journey WSJ

Born
  
July 15, 1975 (
1975-07-15
)

Alma mater
  
Technical University of Hamburg

Occupation
  
Electrical engineerComputer technicianal-Qaeda facilitatorterrorist

Religion
  
Islam (Qutbism, Wahabism)

Education
  
Technical University of Hamburg

Similar People
  
Zakariya Essabar, Mounir el‑Motassadeq, Marwan al‑Shehhi, Mohammed Haydar Zammar, Ziad Jarrah

Said Bahaji (Arabic: سعيد بحجي‎‎, also transliterated as Saeed Bahaji, also known as Zuhayr al-Maghribi, born 15 July 1975 in Haselünne, Lower Saxony), was a citizen of Germany, electrical engineer, and an alleged member of the Hamburg cell that provided money and material support to the perpetrators of the September 11 attacks.

Contents

Said Bahaji 11 September 2001 Unfassbar Der deutsche 911

History

Said Bahaji cdnhistorycommonsorgimagesevents088saidbaha

He was a German citizen, and was born to a Moroccan father and a German mother in 1975. The family moved to Morocco when he was nine years old. He came to Hamburg in 1995. He enrolled in an electrical engineering program at a technical university in 1996. He spent five months in the German army and then received a medical discharge. He lived in a student home during the weekdays and he spent weekends with his aunt, Barbara Arens. Both of them loved computers, and he called her his "high-tech aunt". She saw that he was secular until other students introduced him to radical Islam. She later put an end to the weekend visits.

On November 1, 1998, he moved into an apartment in Germany with future hijackers Mohamed Atta and Ramzi bin al-Shibh. The Hamburg cell was born at this apartment.[1] They met three or four times a week to discuss their anti-American feelings and plot possible attacks. Many al-Qaeda members lived in this apartment at various times, including hijacker Marwan al-Shehhi, Zakariya Essabar, and others. He served as the group's Internet expert.

He had already been under investigation by German intelligence for his connections with Mohammed Haydar Zammar, a radical Islamic cleric. Through this, German intelligence was able to learn some of the activities of Atta and others, but the investigation was eventually dropped for lack of evidence.

In October 1999, he got married at the Al-Quds Mosque in Hamburg. Atta, Jarrah, Shehhi, Zammar, and bin al-Shibh all attended his wedding.

In late 1999, Atta, Shehhi, Jarrah, and bin al-Shibh decided to travel to Chechnya to fight against the Russians, but were convinced by Khalid al-Masri and Mohamedou Ould Slahi at the last minute to change their plans. They instead traveled to Afghanistan to meet with Osama bin Laden and train for terrorist attacks. There are conflicting reports as to whether he went with them; some news reports say that he went, but the 9/11 Commission Report says he stayed in Germany and helped cover for them in their absence. When the group returned to Germany, he was put on a border patrol watch list.

He told his employer in June 2001 that he was going to an internship for a software company in Pakistan. His aunt, Barbara Arens, says that she was suspicious and that she went to the police and pleaded to them "to do something." She says that police took no action against him. Al-Qaeda leader Khalid Sheikh Mohammed told him in August that if he wanted to go to Afghanistan, he should go in the next few weeks, because it would soon become more difficult. He left Germany on September 4, 2001, just a week before the attacks, and flew to Karachi via Istanbul.

Aftermath of the attacks

He and cohort Ramzi bin al-Shibh were charged with 5,000 counts of murder by German officials. Bin al-Shibh was arrested on September 11, 2002, but Bahaji was still at large at the time.

During the October 2009, Pakistan military operation against terrorists in South Waziristan, his German passport was found in a captured militant town.

Death

In August 2017, the Associated Press reported that al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri revealed in an audio message that Bahaji (referring to him by his alias "Zuhayr al-Maghrebi") had died but did not say how, when, or where he was killed. In a list published by the United Nations Security Council of people and entities against whom there are sanctions, Bahaji is said to be "reportedly deceased in September 2013 in the Afghanistan/Pakistan border area."

References

Said Bahaji Wikipedia