ISLAMABAD,
July 8 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Pakistanian authorities
announced Monday, July 8, the arrest of 3 suspects in the June 14 car
bombing of the U.S. Consulate in Karachi and another attack more than
a month earlier.
The
Director General of the Pakistani Rangers, Major-General Salahuddin,
said in a televised announcement, the three suspected militants had
been arrested following raids on several houses in the Karachi area,
CNN reported.
the
Agence France-Press (AFP) reported that Pakistanian Officials
described the arrests as a "great success", adding that
several Kalashnikov rifles, pistols, ammunition, rocket launchers,
explosives and handgrenades had been seized in the raids.
The
men are being held under Pakistan's new anti-terrorism laws which
allow police to detain them without charge for at least 30 days.
CNN
said the three men are also being held in connection with a bomb
attack outside the Karachi Sheraton in May 2002, which killed 14
people, including 11 French engineers. The bomber was among the dead.
The
bombing of the U.S. Consulate killed 12 Pakistanis and seriously
injured more than 20 others.
More
than a week ago a previously unknown group calling itself "al
Qanoon" claimed responsibility for the consulate bombing, saying
it was launching a "holy war" against the United States.
Last
week, the Pakistani Ministry of Interior said it had credible evidence
tying Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda terror network to both bombings, CNN
reported.
In
the weeks following the bombing, the leaders of several militant
groups have been interrogated by Pakistani police and agents from the
American Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI).
Announcing
the latest arrests Monday, Salahuddin said the suspects had also been
linked to a failed assassination attempt on Pakistan President Pervez
Musharraf earlier this year, as well as to attacks on western targets
such as the McDonalds and Kentucky Fried Chicken fast food chains.
Meanwhile,
two of the captured militants confessed their involvement in the
deadly attacks on the U.S. consulate as well as on a bus of French
naval engineers outside the Karachi Sheraton.
Two
of the suspects, Mohammad Imran Bhai and Hanif Ayub, were present at a
press conference late Monday. The third detained suspect, Mohammad
Ahmed Danyal, was not present for legal reasons.
The
AFP added that according to the Rangers Chief Major General Salahuddin
Satti, all three belong to a group called the Harkatul
Mujahedeen-al-Alaami, an offshoot of the banned Kashmiri militant
outfit Harkatul Mujahideen