Terrorist Nicknamed 'Blind Sheik' Dies in US Prison
He was not on the list.
U.S. prison authorities say an Egyptian cleric convicted of
participating in a plan to blow up landmarks in New York City has died in
prison.
An official at the Federal Correction Complex in Butner,
North Carolina, confirmed Saturday that Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman died early
Saturday after a long battle with diabetes and coronary artery disease.
Abdel-Rahman was linked to the 1993 bombing of the World
Trade Center that killed six people but was not convicted of a crime directly
related to it.
He had been incarcerated since 1995 for his advisory role in
a failed plot to blow up Manhattan landmarks, including U.N. headquarters, as
well as a key bridge and two heavily traveled highway tunnels leading into the
city. His stated goal was to interfere with U.S. support for Israel and for
Egypt.
A prison spokesman said Abdel-Rahman was 78.
His son told the Reuters news agency his family had received
a call from U.S. authorities confirming the death.
Abdel-Rahman, an Egyptian, was nicknamed "the blind
sheikh" because he lost his eyesight during childhood because of diabetes.
He read Braille and attended an Islamic boarding school as a child. He became
one of Egypt's most outspoken Muslim clerics, boldly denouncing the country's
secularism.
Abdel-Rahman eventually moved to Afghanistan and developed a
strong relationship with terrorist leader Osama bin Laden.
Despite spending the past two decades in U.S. federal
prison, Abdel-Rahman still had a strong following in Egypt at the time of his
death.
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