Friday, March 28, 2008

Abdullah, pemimpin BN biadab - Prowaris

Abdullah, pemimpin BN biadab - Prowaris
Abdul Halim Mohd Rashid
Fri | Mar 28, 08 | 11:41:07 am MYT

KUALA LUMPUR, 28 Mac (Hrkh) -Perilaku pimpinan tertinggi Barisan Nasional (BN) yang diterajui oleh Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi yang tanpa segan silu menunjukkan penentangan kepada Sultan Terengganu adalah satu perilaku yang sangat biadab dan tidak bermaruah sama sekali, kata Pertubuhan Profesional Melayu dan Pewaris Bangsa (ProWaris).

"Kemelut dan krisis perlantikan Menteri Besar Terengganu sebagai satu isu yang amat kritikal dan memalukan orang Melayu di seluruh dunia," kata pertubuhan itu dalam satu kenyataannya.

Tindakan mengugut pihak istana untuk memboikot upacara angkat sumpah Menteri Besar adalah satu perbuatan yang secara terang-terangan cuba menconteng arang, memperlekeh dan menghina institusi di-raja.

"Adalah satu perkara yang sangat mulia jika Datuk Seri Idris (Jusoh) dapat menunjukkan sifat budiman dan kesetiaanya kepada baginda Sultan serta rakyat Terengganu daripada dilihat sebagai seorang ahli politik yang mementingkan diri sendiri dan mempunyai agenda peribadi yang tersirat," kata pertubuhan itu lagi.

ProWaris menuntut kesemua 22 Ahli Dewan Undangan Negeri (Adun) BN berkenaan, Idris, Timbalan Perdana Menteri Malaysia Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, dan seluruh kepimpinan tertinggi BN yang diketuai oleh Abdullah yang telah sama ada secara langsung ataupun tidak langsung menunjukkan sikap dan peri laku penderhakaan supaya segera memohon menghadap dan seterusnya memohon ampun dan maaf kepada Sultan Terengganu yang juga Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

Pertubuhan itu menasihatkan mereka suaya terus menjunjung lima prinsip Rukunegara dan berikrar untuk tidak mengulangi perilaku biadab mereka lagi di masa hadapan.

PM dikhabarkan pengaruhi Idris buat salah - Dr M

PM dikhabarkan pengaruhi Idris buat salah - Dr M
Abdul Halim Mohd Rashid
Fri | Mar 28, 08 | 1:13:09 pm MYT

KUALA LUMPUR, 28 Mac (Hrkh) -Rakyat Terengganu mengesyaki kesemua kontrak untuk melaksanakan projek-projek di negeri itu diberikan kepada orang tertentu yang mendapat sokongan anggota keluarga Perdana Menteri manakala Perdana Menteri pula dituduh mempengaruhi bekas Menteri Besar, Datuk Seri Idris Jusoh supaya "melakukan kesalahan", kata Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

Bekas Perdana Menteri mengaitkan rasa tidak puas hati tersebut dengan keengganan Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin menerima perlantikan semula Idris sebagai Menteri Besar seperti yang cuba dipaksakan oleh Perdana Menteri, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi melalui pelbagai tindakan orang-orangnya yang disifatkan oleh Ketua Umno Bahagian Cheras sebagai "kurang ajar".

Rabu lalu, Utusan Malaysia melaporkan Setiausaha Badan Perhubungan Umno Terengganu, Datuk Rosol Wahid berkata: "?Kita tunggu arahan daripada presiden (Abdullah). Apa saja yang presiden minta... apa yang dibuat sekarang pun adalah atas arahan presiden".

Mengulas lanjut mengenai keengganan Sultan Terengganu itu, Dr Mahathir berkata: "Mesti ada sebab mengapa Sultan enggan menerima calon yang dinamakan oleh parti. Tetapi baginda memilih untuk tidak menyatakan sebab-sebabnya dan mendedahkan diri kepada perdebatan umum.

"Baginda hanya menyatakan rasa tidak senang dengan keengganan baginda melakukan apa yang biasanya dilakukan oleh Sultan-Sultan".

Rakyat yang prihatin, katanya, mesti bertanya apakah kesalahan yang dibuat calon Menteri Besar tertentu sehingga mencetuskan kemurkaan Sultan.

Mengenai tindakan memberikan projek-projek kepada orang tertentu sahaja itu, bekas Perdana Menteri berkata, khabar angin juga menyatakan bahawa Idris bertanggungjawab ke atas apa yang berlaku itu dan "sudah tentu, mereka fikir beliau mendapat faedah kewangan".

Malaysian Insider menyatakan, orang tertentu yang dimaksudkan oleh Dr Mahathir itu ialah Datuk Patrick Lim.

Dr Mahathir sebelum ini pernah menyatakan Terengganu diperintah oleh menantu Abdullah, Khairy Jamaluddin dan Patrick yang dinamakannya sebagai Patrick Badawi.

Khabar-khabar angin seterusnya menyatakan, kata bekas Perdana Menteri, Abdullah mungkin mempengaruhi Idris supaya "melakukan kesalahan".

Dr Mahathir membayangkan kesemua itu berlaku sejak Barisan Nasional (BN) memerintah kembali Terengganu.

Apabila BN memerintah kembali Terengganu, Wang Ehsan dibelanjakan secara berlebih-lebihan, kata Dr Mahathir.

"Ia bukanlah jumlah yang kecil. Sejak beberapa tahun ini, Wang Ehsan berjumlah beberapa bilion," katanya dalam kenyataan yang disiarkan oleh The Sun.

Sejak BN memerintah kembali Terengganu, katanya lagi, pelbagai jenis projek telah dilaksanakan di Terengganu termasuk Monsoon Cup, rumah-rumah mewah untuk dijual kepada orang asing, Masjid Kristal dan taman temanya, universiti dan lain-lain.

"Sebahagian projek tersebut sangat baik tetapi banyak yang tidak perlu dan membazir," kata Dr Mahathir.

Rakyat Terengganu pula, katanya, merungut kerana projek-projek yang berharga berbilion-bilion ringgit itu telah dikurniakan kontrak perlaksanaannya kepada orang-orang dari luar Terengganu.

"Kontraktor-kontraktor Terengganu tidak mendapat apa-apa," katanya.

Walaupun mengakui kesemua itu adalah khabar-khabar angin, tetapi dengan gaya menyindir Dr Mahathir berkata khabar-khabar angin angin itu tidak baik kepada kerajaan yang mahu menghapuskan rasuah dan bersifat telus.

"Bagaimanapun rakyat tidak mudah menerima penyiasatan agensi-agensi dan jabatan-jabatan kerajaan. Malah Suruhanjaya Diraja pun tidak begitu dihormati. Rakyat percaya, memanglah tidak benar, bahawa kerajaan masuk campur dalam kerja-kerja Badan Pencegah Rasuah (BPR), polis dan Peguam Negara," katanya, sekali lagi dengan gaya menyindir.

Apabila seorang Timbalan Menteri dituduh menerima wang untuk membebaskan orang yang ditahan, katanya, Peguam Negara berkata tidak ada kes.

"Ia tidaklah mudah. Jika ada kes yang melibatkan seseorang (atasan), apa yang perlu dibuat oleh agensi penguatkuasa hanyalah bertanya sama ada beliau terlibat. Jika beliau berkata tidak, tidak ada keslah," katanya.

Menjangkakan penentang-penentangnya akan menuduh beliau melakukan perkara yang lebih buruk lagi, Dr Mahathir berkata beliau sedia disiasat walaupun oleh agensi luar negara.

Usah dipertikai kontrak sosial orang Melayu - Ibrahim Ali

Usah dipertikai kontrak sosial orang Melayu - Ibrahim Ali
Muhammad Yusri Amin
Fri | Mar 28, 08 | 2:55:32 pm MYT

KOTA BHARU, 28 Mac (Hrkh) - Hak-hak keistimewaan orang Melayu di negara ini sudah menjadi kontrak sosial yang difahami rakyat berbilang agama dan bangsa. Dan ia tidak perlu dipertikaikan lagi.

Ahli Parlimen Pasir Mas, Dato' Ibrahim Ali berkata, kedudukan agama Islam dan hak istimewa orang Melayu sudah dijamin dalam Perlembagaan Persekutuan.

"Bangsa lain tidak boleh mengganggu kedudukan agama Islam selaras dengan peruntukan agama Islam sebagai agama rasmi negara. Sebaliknya bangsa lain bebas menganuti agama mereka," katanya di sini baru-baru ini.

Sebelum ini Ketua Menteri Pulau Pinang yang baru, Lim Guan Eng dilaporkan tidak lagi mahu menerima pakai Dasar Ekonomi Baru (DEB) yang hanya memberi keuntungan kepada segelintir orang Melayu sahaja.

Ibrahim yang juga Presiden Majlis Tindakan Takyat Kelantan berkata, mana-mana pihak tidak wajar mempertikaikan kontrak sosial orang Melayu yang sedia wujud di Malaysia.

"Kita sudah ada sosial kontrak. Oleh itu Islam diterima sebagai agama rasmi Persekutuan, demikian juga hak istimewa orang Melayu. Bahasa Melayu sepatutnya menjadi bahasa yang menyatukan semua bangsa," katanya.

Ditanya mengenai kegagalan Umno dan Barisan Nasional mempertahankan penguasaan dua pertiga pada pilihan raya umum lalu katanya, kekalahan parti itu kerana rakyat tertekan dengan kenaikan harga barangan keperluan harian sekarang.

Menurutnya, kenaikan harga barangan mempengaruhi pola pengundian kali ini.

"Dan pilihan raya umum juga memperlihatkan imej Dato' Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi dan Dato' Seri Najib Razak terjejas teruk. Dan kalau Umno mahu kuat semula kena pinda perlembagaan Umno bagi membuka ruang demokrasi," katanya. - mj/ mr

Terima Ahmad Said, Umno jilat najis sendiri

Terima Ahmad Said, Umno jilat najis sendiri
Salahuddin Ayub
Fri | Mar 28, 08 | 4:54:24 pm MYT

DEWAN Pemuda PAS Pusat (DPP Pusat) tertarik dengan pendekatan politik terdesak Umno yang akhirnya terpaksa tunduk dengan kehendak Sultan Terengganu selepas penat 'bersilat' menderhakai istana Terengganu itu.

Keputusan yang diambil oleh MT Umno semalam dipercayai selepas mempertimbangkan kemungkinan Umno/BN akan kehilangan kuasa di Terengganu dan krisis politik dengan Istana Negara di peringkat Pusat.

Perdana Menteri menuduh tindakan sultan 'tidak mengikut Perlembagaan', manakala Peguam Negara cuba digunakan untuk 'mengajar' Sultan Terengganu. Apapun, Umno telah menjilat najisnya sendiri yang sebelum bertegas mahu menolak Ahmad Said sehingga mencemarkan nama baik istana

Kerana bimbangkan kehilangan kuasa tersebut, Umno terpaksa menjilat najisnya sendiri yang selama ini cuba dicampakkan ke muka Tuanku Sultan Terengganu.

Umno semenjak kemenangan pilihan raya pada 8 Mac 2008 telah bersikap kurang ajar, biadap dan derhaka terhadap Sultan Terengganu apabila menamakan Idris Jusoh sebagai Menteri Besar walaupun istana telah memberi isyarat untuk tidak menerimanya.

Apabila istana menamakan Dato' Ahmad Said sebagai Menteri Besar, para pemimpin Umno dari Pusat dan negeri terus-menerus menyerang tindakan sultan, sehingga ada yang mengeluarkan ugutan.

Perdana Menteri menuduh tindakan sultan 'tidak mengikut Perlembagaan', manakala Peguam Negara cuba digunakan untuk 'mengajar' Sultan Terengganu.

Setiausaha Agung dan Presiden Umno pula mengancam untuk memecat Ahmad Said, manakala Umno Terengganu sudah memecatnya.

Lebih biadap lagi apabila para pemimpin Umno yang menolak pilihan sultan mahu mengenakan undi tidak percaya terhadap Ahmad Said, selain mengugut untuk meletakkan jawatan.

Tindakan MT Umno semalam untuk mengiktiraf Ahmad Said memang akan menyelesaikan kemelut politik di Terengganu, tetapi ia tidak akan dapat menyembuh luka di hati Sultan dan rakyat Terengganu seluruhnya. Selepas dua minggu melancarkan serangan ke atas istana Terengganu dan pengikut-pengikut mereka mula biadap dengan menggelarkan Sultan Terengganu sebagai 'natang' (binatang), akhirnya Setiausaha Umno Terengganu mengakui bahawa semua tindakan biadap dan derhaka mereka ini adalah atas arahan Presiden Umno, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

Selepas dua minggu melancarkan serangan ke atas istana Terengganu dan pengikut-pengikut mereka mula biadap dengan menggelarkan Sultan Terengganu sebagai 'natang' (binatang), akhirnya Setiausaha Umno Terengganu mengakui bahawa semua tindakan biadap dan derhaka mereka ini adalah atas arahan Presiden Umno, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.

Abdullah sebagai Presiden Umno dan ketua kerajaan telah melakukan satu tindakan yang amat memalukan bagi rakyat negara ini kerana mengarah satu perbuatan biadap terhadap Sultan Terengganu yang juga Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

Bagi DPP Pusat, tindakan MT Umno semalam untuk mengiktiraf Ahmad Said memang akan menyelesaikan kemelut politik di Terengganu, tetapi ia tidak akan dapat menyembuh luka di hati Sultan dan rakyat Terengganu seluruhnya.

Tidak pernah dalam sejarah orang Melayu bersikap begitu biadap terhadap sultan sedangkan baginda bertindak demikian untuk membela keadilan bagi pihak rakyat.

Kita biasa mendengar raja-raja ditentang kerana kezaliman mereka, tetapi hari ini raja yang adil cuba diderhakai oleh pemimpin zalim BN.

Akhirnya, hukum karma menimpa Umno apabila terpaksa mengalah di atas kezaliman mereka dan tunduk kepada kemahuan sultan.

Apapun, Umno telah menjilat najisnya sendiri yang sebelum bertegas mahu menolak Ahmad Said sehingga mencemarkan nama baik istana.

Ketua Dewan Pemuda PAS

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Spreading Saudi Fundamentalism in U.S.

Spreading Saudi Fundamentalism in U.S.
Network of Wahhabi Mosques, Schools, Web Sites Probed by FBI

By Susan Schmidt
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 2, 2003; Page A01

On Aug. 20, 2001, Saleh Ibn Abdul Rahman Hussayen, a man who would soon be named a minister of the Saudi government and put in charge of its two holy mosques, arrived in the United States to meet with some of this country's most influential fundamentalist Sunni Muslim leaders.

His journey here was to include meetings and contacts with officials of several Saudi-sponsored charities that have since been accused of links to terrorist groups, including the Illinois-based Global Relief Foundation, which was shut down by U.S. authorities last year.

_____Graphic_____

• Web of Connections: The travels of a future Saudi government minister in the United States illuminate a network of Islamic organizations under investigation for possible links to terrorist activities.




He met with the creators of Islamic Web sites that U.S. authorities contend promote the views of radical Saudi clerics tied to Osama bin Laden. And among the imams on his travel schedule was a leader of a small religious center tucked into a nondescript office building in Falls Church, the same site used for a time by the spiritual leader of a group of area men indicted in June as suspected jihadists.

On the night of Sept. 10, 2001, Hussayen stayed at a Herndon hotel that also housed three of the Saudi hijackers who would slam an aircraft into the Pentagon the next day, though there is no evidence that he had contact with them.

Hussayen, who was unavailable for comment, is accused of no wrongdoing. The purpose of his meetings remains, in fact, a mystery.

But his travels form a road map to some of the religious and charitable groups in America dedicated to the spread of Wahhabism, the rigid and puritanical strain of Islam dominant in Saudi Arabia. In recent months, authorities have begun to focus on the role of radical Wahhabi clerics and organizations, including some that Hussayen came to see here, in exhorting followers to violence.

Backed by money from Saudi Arabia, Wahhabis have built or taken over hundreds of mosques in North America and opened branches of Saudi universities here for the training of imams as part of the effort to spread their beliefs, which are intolerant of Christianity, Judaism and even other strains of Islam.

"A growing body of accepted evidence and expert research demonstrates that the Wahhabi ideology that dominates, finances and animates many groups here in the United States, indeed is antithetical to the values of tolerance, individualism and freedom as we conceive these things," said Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), who has been holding hearings on Wahhabism.

What began as discrete investigations in Idaho, Michigan, New York and Northern Virginia has coalesced in recent months into a cluster of interrelated probes. Prosecutors and FBI agents are trying to determine whether links among the groups suggest a network whose purpose is to incite violent jihad, or holy war, and recruit people to fight it, according to sources familiar with aspects of the investigation.

To date, a variety of charges have been brought against 19 people associated with the groups, and seven have pleaded guilty.

Authorities also are investigating the use of Internet sites, mosques, charities and Islamic conferences as possible venues for recruitment, the sources said. U.S. prisons, where several of the groups have mounted efforts to spread their brand of Islam with outreach programs that include distribution of Korans and other literature, have also come under scrutiny.

The FBI opened a major case file on the suspected network last year, law enforcement sources said, though progress investigating it was initially slow. "The feeling was, 'we see the network, we know it's there, but it's out of our reach. It's so monumental nobody knew how to take it on," one law enforcement official said.

The probe has mushroomed, with agents and prosecutors aided by new access to previously off-limits information gathered over years of noncriminal intelligence investigations, the result of powers gained in part through the USA Patriot Act, the anti-terrorism law approved after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

The investigation is heating up at a time when Washington's relations with Riyadh have been strained by allegations that the Saudi government has done little to rein in huge charities there that have been accused of funding terrorism. The Saudis strenuously deny funding terrorists and say they are cracking down on organizations accused of doing so.

The Saudi government, through its embassy here, declined to discuss any aspect of the probe. Embassy officials agreed in August to forward a request for an interview to Hussayen, but provided no response.

Salem Marayati, executive director of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, an advocacy group, said in an interview that "if a person has recruited people to go commit violence against people abroad, he should be prosecuted." But he said law enforcement authorities cannot trample on constitutionally protected religious freedoms. "Groups should not be targeted for their beliefs, only for their activities if they are criminal," Marayati said.

Wahhabism and Terrorists

Wahhabism took root in the Arabian desert in the 1740s, promulgated by Mohammed ibn Abd Wahhab, who sought to purge what he saw as corrupting influences in Islam and return it to original orthodoxy. Under those principles, non-Wahhabis are considered infidels, and failure to adhere to the faith's tenets draws severe punishment; church and state are one.

Wahhabism found a powerful ally in Mohammed ibn Saud, a Bedouin chief whose conquests spread Wahhabism throughout the Arabian Peninsula, the foundation for centuries of rule by the House of Saud. But when oil wealth opened Saudi Arabia to the West in the 20th century, some Wahhabi clerics became radical opponents of a royal family they no longer saw as keepers of the faith but as decadent apostates.

Some U.S. officials describe Saudi-backed Wahhabism as a philosophical "platform" that terrorists have used to justify holy war. "Al Qaeda has taken advantage of state-supported proselytizing around the world," said senior Treasury Department official Juan Zarate, whose office has taken a leading role in designating terrorist financiers and is pressing the Saudi government to crack down on them, as well.

One of the principal organizations under investigation in the United States is a group the Saudi Embassy has branded as Muslim extremists. It is the Michigan-based Islamic Assembly of North America (IANA), whose webmaster is Saleh Hussayen's nephew: Sami Omar Hussayen, a computer scientist jailed in Idaho on charges he failed to disclose his work for IANA on immigration forms.

IANA, U.S. authorities have contended in Idaho court proceedings, is a powerful engine for groups that promote teachings and religious fatwas -- orders that advocate violence against the United States -- issued by two radical Saudi clerics.

The clerics, Safar Hawali and Salman Ouda, were identified in the first World Trade Center bombing trial as spiritual advisers to bin Laden. Both were jailed for radicalism during the 1990s in Saudi Arabia.

U.S. investigators are focusing on interlocking affiliations among organizations and individuals that have ties to IANA, which has created a dozen or more Web sites whose objective, prosecutors have stated in court papers in Idaho, was the "dissemination of radical Islamic ideology, the purpose of which was indoctrination, recruitment of members and the instigation of acts of violence and terrorism."

According to FBI testimony in those proceedings, Hussayen visited Wahhabis and Salafis -- as non-Saudi adherents are known -- in New York, Michigan, Chicago, Canada and, most significantly, Northern Virginia, a hub for Saudi-backed religious organizations that have wide influence in promoting Salafi doctrine in mosques, at conferences and around the globe on the Internet.

Hussayen met with IANA representatives in Ann Arbor, Mich., according to the court testimony of Idaho FBI agent Michael Gneckow. In court papers, the FBI has described Saleh Hussayen as a financial backer of IANA, an assertion confirmed by his nephew's lawyer in Idaho.

In recent months, 19 individuals who have come under investigation as part of the probe have been arrested or indicted. They include Bassem K. Khafagi, a former IANA president, who pleaded guilty two weeks ago to bank fraud in federal court in Detroit. In Syracuse, five men tied to an IANA affiliate called Help the Needy are charged by federal authorities with sending money to Iraq in violation of U.S. economic sanctions.

In Northern Virginia, 11 men were indicted in June, accused of training to wage jihad with a Pakistani terrorist group. Charges against seven of the men were upgraded last week to conspiring to support terrorist organizations, including al Qaeda. Four others have already pleaded guilty to lesser gun and conspiracy charges.

The indictment also alleged that the men's spiritual leader, Ali Timimi, who has long been associated with IANA, told group members in September 2001 that the time had come for them "to . . . join the mujaheddin engaged in violent jihad in Kashmir, Chechnya, Afghanistan or Indonesia" and that "American troops were legitimate targets of the jihad."

Defense lawyers in the case have argued that the men are being unfairly targeted because they are Muslims.

Timimi has denied that he condoned killing Americans. He has not been indicted, though his attorney has said that he expects Timimi to be charged.

When Timimi's Fairfax house was searched by the FBI this spring, items seized included Khafagi's personal papers, which Timimi was holding for safekeeping. The two had been IANA's representatives to the 1995 international women's conference in Beijing, where IANA argued against Western feminism and defended female circumcision, which is practiced in some Islamic societies.

Investigators at multiple federal agencies are trying to sort out the network's seemingly innumerable links, some of which lead back to the same nondescript office building at 360 S. Washington St. in Falls Church. It is there that Timimi used to lecture at Dar al Arqam, the same religious center frequented by another internationally known Salafi imam, Jaafar Idris. His lectures, like Timimi's, are posted on extremist Web sites around the world, including IANA's.

Idris is president of the American Open University in Fairfax, a "distance learning" center that uses the Web to promote Salafi teaching. The university has received funding from IANA, according to tax records.

Neither Idris nor others at the university responded to requests for interviews, but they were among those in the United States whom Hussayen was scheduled to see, according to sources with knowledge of his trip.

Those sources said Hussayen was also scheduled to visit officials at the Muslim World League, a multibillion-dollar, Saudi-based umbrella charity organization whose U.S. offices are at 360 S. Washington St. Muslim World League officials declined to be interviewed.

The Muslim World League office was raided in March 2002 by Treasury Department agents as part of an investigation into a Herndon-based network of Saudi-financed charities and companies suspected of ties to al Qaeda, the Islamic Resistance Movement (Hamas) and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The Muslim World League and its offshoot, the International Islamic Relief Organization, have been the subjects of terrorism financing inquiries in the United States and several other countries.

Hussayen also was scheduled to meet with officials of the World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY), another huge Saudi-based charity headed by the Saudi government's minister of Islamic affairs, according to sources knowledgeable about the investigation. WAMY's U.S. office on Leesburg Pike in Falls Church was incorporated by bin Laden's nephew, Abdullah bin Laden, and operated by him until the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Bush administration officials have pressed the Saudi government to clamp down on the Muslim World League and WAMY, according to federal law enforcement sources, and both are defendants in civil lawsuits filed by families of the victims of the attacks.

Maher Hanania, attorney for WAMY in the United States, denied that WAMY has ties to IANA and said that Hussayen did not meet with WAMY officials while he was in the United States. WAMY has not been criminally charged in any country with supporting terrorism, he said. He acknowledged that WAMY's office here has been under FBI investigation, but said that thus far "the FBI has found no wrongdoing. . . . As to our understanding, the FBI has closed its file on WAMY." The FBI would not comment.

Recent Senate testimony about Khalid Mishal, a Hamas leader who has praised suicide bombers, speaking at an October 2002 WAMY conference in Riyadh, has prompted demands on Capitol Hill that the Bush administration freeze the organization's assets. Hanania said that while Mishal spoke at the conference, that is evidence only that WAMY promotes free expression. WAMY, he said, does not "condone his thinking or policies."

Other featured speakers at that conference included Ouda, Idris and Saleh Hussayen.

IANA conferences in the United States began drawing the scrutiny of terrorism researchers a decade ago because of their heavy Wahhabi and Salafi bent. According to the Investigative Project, a terrorism research group that has monitored Islamic extremists, a senior al Qaeda recruiter, Abdelrahman Dosari, spoke at three IANA conferences in the early 1990s.

FBI and Treasury officials said they believe some Islamic conferences, as well as Web sites that extol radical Islam, are vehicles in the United States for recruitment and fundraising by terrorist groups.

Until it was modified this year, for example, IANA's Islamway.com Web site offered Arabic-language videos with graphic scenes of jihadist combat. "Martyrs of Bosnia" contains footage of al Qaeda members, and suspected al Qaeda members are featured in a second such film called "Operation Badr."

The U.S. government has shut down numerous Web sites that promote terrorism, but new ones pop up quickly.

IANA has received $3 million since 1995, according to FBI court filings, much of it from abroad, including $100,000 from Saleh Hussayen. Government officials are tracing the finances of IANA and related groups.

"It's much more than about the money they raise. It's proselytizing, recruiting and radicalizing people in this country and other places across the globe," said Matthew Levitt, a former FBI counterterrorism official now with the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

The Idaho visa fraud indictment against Sami Hussayen contends that he administered a Web site associated with IANA that expressly advocated suicide attacks and using airliners as weapons. Court papers filed by the government assert that an IANA Web site published a fatwa issued by Ouda on June 19, 2001, that "justified and advocated suicide bombings," and that two months later, on Aug. 16, an IANA Web site in Canada published an "invitation to jihad."

"If Sheikh Ouda holds up a banner saying, 'Go Kill the Military,' a true believer takes that as an order to take action," one official involved in the investigation said.

David Nevin, attorney for Sami Hussayen, said Ouda and Hawali are "observed figures" in Saudi Arabia, not proponents of violence. Nevin said Saleh Hussayen was a backer of IANA but not a principal in the organization. He declined to discuss Hussayen's visit to the United States, other than to say that "it was utterly and completely innocuous and without connection to anything improper."

Within five months of his journey, Hussayen would assume the post of general president of the Grand Mosque and the Prophet's Mosque, a position that involves him in the administrative affairs of the kingdom's charities.

Hussayen has a background in Saudi-backed charities. Virginia incorporation records show that during the 1990s, he was a director of the SAAR Foundation, a charitable organization that was at the center of a sprawling conglomerate of Muslim institutes, companies and religious groups that are under federal investigation for alleged ties to terrorist organizations. SAAR's offices in Northern Virginia were raided in 2002, kicking off the government's most wide-ranging probe to date into suspected terrorist financing. This week, Abdurahman Alamoudi, a prominent Muslim activist affiliated with the SAAR network, was charged with illegally doing business with Libya.

Nancy Luque, attorney for two top officials of the defunct SAAR network, confirmed that a Saleh Hussayen had served as a SAAR director, but suggested that her clients did not know of his importance in Saudi Arabia.

Saudi Embassy Donates Korans

In his travels in Northern Virginia, Hussayen also scheduled a meeting with the leader of the Islamic Foundation of America (IFA), a Springfield organization that operates a school, a mosque and an active prison outreach program, at one time sending out about 40 Korans a day provided by the Saudi Embassy, according to spokeswoman Narmeen Slim.

The group's founders include Idris and an austere and enigmatic Saudi cleric, Ibrahim Ibn Kulaib. The foundation has chosen a run-down warehouse just yards from the Interstate 395 Mixing Bowl from which to mount its stated mission of "spreading the message of Islam throughout the U.S. and all over the world."

IFA's headquarters have been visited by well-known Wahhabi and Salafi leaders. Among those who have spoken there are Timimi and Sirhaj Wirhaj, a New York imam who was an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

The most intriguing aspect of Hussayen's journey may be entirely coincidental: his brief proximity in a hotel near Dulles International Airport to three of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers the night before they crashed Flight 77 into the Pentagon. On the night of Sept. 10, Hani Hanjour, Khalid Almihdhar and Nawaf Alhazmi checked into the same hotel, a Marriott Residence Inn.

The FBI has examined hotel videotapes and interviewed employees, but has found no indication that Hussayen and the hijackers interacted, law enforcement sources said. After the attack, an FBI agent interviewed hotel guests, including Hussayen and his wife, but did not get very far.

According to court testimony from FBI agent Gneckow earlier this year, the interview was cut short when Hussayen "feigned a seizure, prompting the agents to take him to a hospital, where the attending physicians found nothing wrong with him."

The agent recommended that Hussayen "should not be allowed to leave until a follow-up interview could occur," Gneckow told the court. But "her recommendation, for whatever reason, was not complied with," he said.

On Sept. 19, the day air travel resumed, Hussayen and his wife took off for Saudi Arabia.

Research editor Margot Williams contributed

to this report.