Sunday, May 16, 2010

Dawood Ibrahim third on Forbes' Most Wanted Fugitives list

Dawood Ibrahim

Dawood Ibrahim, India, AOS's most wanted man, supposed of having ordered the 1993 Mumbai bombings, numbers number three on Forbes, AO Refugee Most Wanted "list, topped by Osama bin Laden for a next time.


Not one of the world's most disreputable criminals AOS been prosecuted since the list first appears in April 2008, noted the American commerce magazine.

Bin Laden is believed to be beating out in Pakistan, AOS tribal areas, have managed in eight years to avoid the biggest manhunt in history. Other refugees on the list have not only been free, some may have been more influential, it said.

Others on the list, Mexico, Joaquin Guzman, AOS's most notorious drug dealer, has expanded its control over the corridors are used to smuggle cocaine into the United States, as some of his rivals have fallen into a bloody war between the Mexican army and cartel activity.

Dawood Ibrahim, head of the prearranged crime group D Company, and Matteo Messina Denaro, the Italian mafia playboy, also appears to have consolidated control over their organizations, noted Forbes. Ibrahim, AOS 5000 members of a criminal syndicate involved in everything from drugs to contract killings, which works mostly in Pakistan, India and the United Arab Emirates, said it.

Ibrahim shares smuggling routes with Al Qaeda, the U.S. administration says, and has collaborated with Al Qaeda and its Southeast Asian Affiliate, Lashkar-e-Taiba and drawn by train bombings in Mumbai in 2008 with the probable Ibrahim, AOS help.

Ibrahim is supposed of having prearranged the 1993 Mumbai bombings that killed 257 people and wounded 713th although the Pakistani administration denies it, is likely to Ibrahim in Pakistan, where he has important connections to the powerful cleverness service, "said Forbes.

Forbes said it consulted with law enforcement in the United States and approximately the world to identify their top 10 all on the list has been unlawfully charged or indicted, some in national jurisdictions and some by international tribunals. They are all charged with a long history of committing serious crimes that are still considered dangerous. And each represents a type of criminal problem that legal institutions in different jurisdictions are struggling, it said.

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