'NY bombing suspect spent weeks at Pakistani madrassa tied to Taliban'

Balochistan govt official reveals sensitive information regarding Ahmad Khan Rahami's visits to Pakistan


News Desk September 27, 2016
NY bombing suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami. PHOTO: AP

Ahmad Khan Rahami, who is responsible for the recent bombings in New York and New Jersey, reportedly spent time in a Pakistani madrassa closely associated with the Afghan Taliban, a government official told The Guardian.

New York bomb suspect identified as Afghan origin US citizen

The 28-year-old, Afghan-born American, spent time at the Kaan Kuwa Naqshbandi madrassa on his two visits to Pakistan, a security official working for the government of Balochistan revealed. "Rahami spent three weeks in 2011 receiving lectures and Islamic education at the madrassa in Kuchlak," the official said.

Kuchlak, located 20km north of Quetta, is a well-known hub for the Taliban. It is home to many madrassas intimately linked with the group.

"Rahami also visited other sensitive areas in the province, including Surkhab and Nushki, where former Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor was killed by a US drone in May," he said.

US portrays NY bomb suspect as extremist who praised bin Laden

US officials have released basic details about Rahami’s two visits to Pakistan. The first in 2011 when he spent a couple of months in Quetta and got married and the second was when he journeyed to Afghanistan in 2013 and spent almost a year. "But very little information has emerged from inside Pakistan about what Rahami did during his visits."

Ahmad Khan Rahami of Elizabeth, New Jersey was captured in Linden, New Jersey, Elizabeth Mayor Chris Bollwage had told reporters. He said two officers were shot and that Rahami was wounded and taken to a local hospital.

NY bomb suspect violent at home, lived in Pakistan

Investigators believe more people were involved in the New York and New Jersey bombing incidents, two US officials said.  The motive behind the bombings was not immediately clear, though New York Governor Andrew Cuomo described it as an apparent act of “terrorism.”

This article originally appeared on The Guardian.

COMMENTS (10)

Oommen | 7 years ago | Reply world is not "amused" by this news.
Parvez | 7 years ago | Reply ......and he spent the most part of his 28 years in America. It needs to be asked what caused him to give up his ' American Dream ' and choose the path that he did ? .......surely a few weeks at a madrasah should not be enough to overturn a lifetime of the good life.
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