Word: planners
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...government maintains that it has not used physical torture in its interrogation of alleged 9/11 planner Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. So why would the al-Qaeda operative give up his colleague Iyman Faris to the feds? Because, experts say, eventually everybody cracks. The only variables are how long someone holds out and what pushes him over...
...protection disability insurance instead of fully funding your IRA or 401(k). If you have already maxed out your retirement contributions and have purchased an individual disability policy to supplement the coverage that you may get through your job, then you should consider getting this extra protection, says financial planner James Knaus of LaBrecque, Jackson, Price & Roehl of Troy, Mich. Count on paying about 2% to 3% of your gross income for an individual disability policy with retirement protection, Knaus says. Costs will vary according to factors that affect any disability plan: your age, your health, the length of time...
...looser definition of complicity in terrorism, allowing investigating magistrates to jail Ganczarski as a probable coconspirator in the Djerba attack. That's not all they will be looking into. One of the telephone numbers that German officials found at Ganczarski's home was for Ramzi Binalshibh, a key planner of the 9/11 attacks who was arrested last September in Pakistan. --By Bruce Crumley and Steve Zwick
...planning the bombings to coincide with the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, when the heads of state, including U.S. President George W. Bush, were supposed to gather in Thailand. But the plan was aborted, police say, following the May 16 arrest in Bangkok of the cell's suspected chief planner, Singaporean Arifin bin Ali, who also goes by the alias John Wong Ah Hung. Arifin, it is now known, was one of the accomplices who entered southern Thailand with Mas Selamat in December...
...thing for Karachi: his charity foundation now runs orphanages, mental institutions, clinics and ambulance services. Ardeshir Cowasjee, an irascible millionaire who wears silk pajamas and writes a weekly column for Dawn in which he tracks corruption to the highest places, vows to stay put, as does sociologist and city planner Arif Hassan who campaigns to save the few remaining buildings from Karachi's regal colonial past. Roland De Souza, whose organization SHERRI fights against illegal land developers whom he says are often in cahoots with city nabobs and some military officers, also insists he will always call Karachi his home...