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LONDON, Aug. 7 (Xinhuanet) -- Two senior al-Qaida operatives in Saudi Arabia
were suspected to make money transfers and use coded text messages to
communicate with suspected terrorists in Britain before the July bombing attacks
in London, The Sunday Telegraph said.
Among the two men, both of Moroccan descent, the newspaper said, Younis
Mohammed Ibrahim al-Hayari, allegedly al-Qaida's leader in Saudi Arbia, was
killed in Riyadh three weeks ago and Abdel Karim al-Mejati died in a shoot-out
in the central al-Qassimregion in April.
Saudi security officials suspected both men of involvement in the attacks
in London on July 7 and 21 and said that al-Qaida is definitely operating in
Britain, the paper said, quoting an official as saying "it's beyond doubt
they're active in your country."
Scotland Yard, headquarters of Metropolitan police of London, is
investigating who received the coded messages and money - transferred from Saudi
Arabia to Britain via businesses at both ends before July this year, the report
said.
"We are trying to establish whether the money was directly linked to the
individuals who carried out either the first or the second sets of bombings in
London," the paper quoted a Saudi Security adviser as saying. "The message and
the money transfers were highly professional they were using SIM cards for six
hours and then throwing them away.
In a recent interview with the Sunday Telegraph, the paper said, Prince
Turki al-Faisal, the Saudi ambassador to London, saidthat his country had warned
Britain less than four months ago thatsuch an attack was pending. Enditem
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