Islamabad/New York, May 4 (DPA) The US sought help from Islamabad Tuesday to investigate the alleged involvement of a Pakistani immigrant in an attempted car bombing in New York City, officials said.
US ambassador Anne W Patterson made the request during a meeting with Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi.
Faisal Shahzad, identified as a native of the southern port city of Karachi, was arrested late Monday by US authorities for allegedly parking a car containing a homemade bomb in Times Square Saturday, officials said early Tuesday.
According to a statement, Shahzad was arrested at New York’s John F Kennedy International Airport as he attempted to board a flight to Dubai after he was identified by customs and security officials.
Abdul Basit, a spokesman for Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, said Qureshi had assured the US ambassador that Pakistan would cooperate fully with the investigation.
“Our cooperation with the US against terrorism is a constant and ongoing process, and if the US needs our assistance on this particular issue we will do all we can,” Basit said.
DawnNews television reported that US authorities had provided information to officials in Islamabad about the suspect.
Shahzad travelled to Karachi on an Emirates airline flight July 3, 2009 and flew back August 3, it reported.
Shahzad was scheduled for court arraignment Tuesday in Manhattan.
“This investigation is ongoing, it is multi-faceted and it is aggressive,” US Attorney General Eric Holder said in confirming the arrest.
“As we move forward, we will focus on not just holding those responsible for it accountable, but also on obtaining any intelligence about terrorist organisations overseas,” he said. “We are deploying every resource available and we will not rest until we have bought everyone responsible to justice”.
Holder said government agents were pursuing multiple leads and urged US citizens to remain vigilant for attempted attacks.
“It is clear the intent behind this terror attack was to kill Americans,” he said.
The suspect is a resident of the nearby state of Connecticut and is believed to have anonymously bought the 1993 Nissan Pathfinder with cash a few weeks before, the New York Times reported online, citing two sources briefed on the police investigation.
A New York police officer Saturday noticed smoke billowing from a park vehicle and discovered the bomb, which had failed to detonate. Authorities said the casualties could have been significant if the improvised device had exploded.
Police said the vehicle was loaded with petrol, propane gas tanks, fireworks and fertilizer.
Authorities were seeking to learn whether the suspect might have had contacts with militants in Pakistan or elsewhere. The investigation was transferred Monday to the international terrorism branch of the federal government’s Joint Terrorism Task Force, two officials told the Times.
“It’s a prominent lead that they’re following, the international association,” the paper quoted a senior official as saying on condition of anonymity. “But there’s still a lot of information being gathered”.