Police detain chief suspect in Pearl case
by Kathy Gannon
The Associated Press
KARACHI, Pakistan Police arrested a British-born
Islamic militant yesterday they say masterminded the kidnapping of
Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl the biggest break
yet in the quest to free him. An official close to the investigation
said the suspect told police Pearl is alive.
Ahmad Omar Saeed Sheikh, 27, was arrested
yesterday afternoon in the eastern city of Lahore, according to Tasneem
Noorani, a senior official of Pakistan's Interior Ministry. Saeed
was flown to Karachi late yesterday for further questioning, the government
news agency reported.
Following the arrest, police fanned out
across this city of 14 million people, raiding homes of suspected
Islamic extremists and searching settlements along the bleak and thinly
populated Pakistani coast. Police cautioned that rescuing Pearl still
could take time.
Saeed "is one who is highly educated
and one who I would feel is a hard nut to crack," Karachi Police
Chief Kamal Shah said. "I don't think it would be very easy to
break him straight away. It would take time I feel before we get all
the details about Daniel from his interrogation."
Saeed's capture followed an intensive, nationwide
manhunt and was announced ahead of Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf's
meeting today with President George Bush in Washington. Musharraf
is expected to seek U.S. economic and political support to help combat
Muslim extremism in this predominantly Islamic country of 147 million
people.
The Pearl kidnapping has been an embarrassment
for Musharraf, who's been trying to dispel Pakistan's image as a hotbed
of Islamic fundamentalism. Saeed's arrest is a boost for the Pakistani
leader as he meets Bush.
Pearl, 38, the Journal's South Asia bureau
chief, disappeared Jan. 23 on his way to meet with Islamic extremist
contacts. He was believed to be working on a story about links between
Pakistani militants and Richard C. Reid, the man accused of trying
to detonate explosives hidden in his sneakers on a Paris-to-Miami
flight in December.
Jamil Yousuf, head of a citizen-police liaison
committee involved in the investigation, said the bearded, bespectacled
Saeed told police that threats to kill Pearl were not carried out.
"He's alive. He's OK," Yousuf quoted Saeed as saying of
Pearl.