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Blind Egyptian sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman dies in US prison

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A 1993 photo of Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, the blind spiritual leader of Egypt's largest Islamic extremist fundamentalist group Jamaa Islamiyya. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Blind sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman, the Egyptian-born cleric said to have been linked to the 1993 World Trade Centre bombing, died on Saturday of natural causes in a US prison facility, the Justice Department said. He was 78 years old.

Abdel Rahman was serving a life sentence on several terrorism-related charges at a Federal Medical Centre in Butner, North Carolina. His death came after a long battle with diabetes and coronary artery disease, the Bureau of Prisons said.

An April, 1993 photo of sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman facing photographers and reporters during a news conference in Jersey City. Photo: AFP
An April, 1993 photo of sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman facing photographers and reporters during a news conference in Jersey City. Photo: AFP
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The sheikh was seen as an extremist spiritual leader even after his conviction in 1995 for conspiring to bomb New York landmarks, including the United Nations, and assassinate the former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

Abdel Rahman, who sported a long, gray beard and signature sunglasses, led the militant Gamaa Islamiya group in Egypt before emigrating to the United States.

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He preached a radical brand of Islam and was seen as having inspired the 1993 bombing of New York’s World Trade Centre, which left six people dead and wounded around 1,000.

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