Madina Trading
Company, Part of a Bigger Conspiracy
International Terrorism Monitor: Paper No.
580
By B. Raman
On June 12, 2009, US and Italian
investigators arrested some persons on a
charge of stealing phone services from phone
companies around the world and using the
illegal profits thus earned for funding
terrorism.
2. They were accused of hacking phone lines
and selling the phone services thus
illegally obtained through call centers and
via phone cards. It was stated by the
invesigators that many of the phone calls
were made over lines owned by the AT&T Corp.
While the AT&T was not hacked, 12 million
minutes of its phone services valued at $55
million were allegedly stolen by the
arrested persons.
3. The three hackers, who were indicted by a
grand jury of New Jersey in the US on June
12, 2009, were residents of the Philippines.
They were accused by the invesigators of
helping the Madina Trading Company of
Brescia, Italy, in obtaining stolen phone
lines for providing stolen phone services to
the customers of the company in India,
Pakistan, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia and
Egypt. The "Wall Street Journal" reported on
June 13, 2009, that the Madina Trading
Company, which paid the three hackers,
also 'financed the communications of the
terrorists" in the Mumbai 26/11 attacks.
4. According to the U.S. indictment, Mahmoud
Nusier, 40, Paul Michael Kwan, 27, and Nancy
Gomez, 24, residing in the Philippines,
conspired to break into the phone systems of
2,500 entities in the U.S., Canada,
Australia and Europe. The three hackers were
arrested by the Philippines Police last
year, but were released on bail. On getting
information of their hacking into the phone
systems of American companies, US
authorities took up the investigation and
have sought their extradition from the
Filippino authorities. It is not known what
action has been taken by the Filippino
authorities on the extradition request from
their US counterparts. The "Wall Street
Journal" reported that the Filippino
authorities alleged that Nusier, a Jordanian
national, had links with Al Qaeda.
5. The Italian Police arrested on June 12,
2009, five Pakistani nationals during raids
on 10 call centers suspected of involvement
in the alleged conspiracy. Among those
arrested were a husband-and-wife team who
managed call centers in Brescia, Italy --
Mohammad Zamir, 40 years old, and Shabina
Kanwal, 38. The indictment filed in the New
Jersey court alleged that the Madina Trading
Company is owned by one of the call-center
operators involved in the alleged
conspiracy. However, the owner of the
company was not named.
6. Two employees of the same Madina Trading
Company in Brescia ---- 60-year-old Mohammad
Yaqub Janijua and his son 31-year-old Aamer
Yaqub Janijua----- who were managing the
company were arrested by the Italian
authorities on November 21, 2009, on a
charge of aiding and abetting international
terrorism as well as illegal financial
activity.
7. According to Stefano Fonzi, the head of
the anti-terrorism police of Brescia, on
November 25, 2008, they sent money using a
stolen identity to a U.S. company to
activate an Internet phone account used by
the terrorists involved in the 26/11
terrorist attacks in Mumbai. The funds were
transferred under the identity of another
Pakistani who had never been to Italy and
was not involved in the attacks, Fonzi said.
His identity was probably stolen when he
used another money transfer agency in
Pakistan. The order to open the account that
allowed the attackers to communicate during
the attack came from two men in Pakistan.
The Italian Police said the identities of
these Pakistanis had been intimated to the
Pakistani authorities.
8. The transfer of the money by the Mumbai
conspirators through the Madina Trading
Company had come to the notice of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and the
Indian authorities shortly after the 26/11
attacks, but the manager of the company and
his son could not be arrested immediately by
the Italian authorities as they had fled
Italy----reportedly to Pakistan. They were
arrested when they returned to Italy. If it
is correct that they had fled to Pakistan,
it is not clear why they were not arrested
by the Pakistani authorities.
9.The investigation into the activities of
the Madina Trading Company bring out the
involvement of members of the Pakistani
diaspora in the West in the sale of stolen
phone services and the use of such
companies by terrorist organisations based
in Pakistan such as the Lashkar-e-Toiba
(LET). These organisations seem to have an
up-to-date database of Pakistani-owned or
run companies which could be used for
facilitating terrorist attacks.
(The
writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)