The leader of al-Qaeda in
Al-Masri, also known as Abu Hamza al-Muhajir, was detained in the northern city of
The
The Egyptian-born militant took over the leadership of the group from Abu Musab al-Zarqawi shortly after he was killed in a
Al-Qaeda in
Joint operation
A spokesman for the Iraqi defence ministry, Mohammad al-Askari, told the Associated Press that he had been informed of Masri's capture by the Iraqi military in
"The commander of
Interior ministry spokesman Maj-Gen Abdul-Karim Khalaf told al-Iraqiya TV that security forces had "arrested one of al-Qaeda's leaders at midnight and during the primary investigations he admitted that he was Abu Hamza al-Muhajir".
Gen Khalaf said a source close the al-Qaeda leader had informed police that he would be at a house in
Members of al-Qaeda are believed to have regrouped in the northern city since the beginning of the
A
'Minister of war'
Al-Masri is believed to have helped Zarqawi form the first al-Qaeda cell in
After becoming leader, he vowed to "continue what Sheikh Abu Musab began" and avenge his death with attacks that would "turn your children's hair white".
In April 2007, he was named "minister of war" in the 10-man cabinet of the "Islamic State of Iraq".
Shortly afterwards, the Iraqi government claimed al-Masri had been killed in an "internal battle" between militants, but this was quickly denied by the group.
In an hour-long audio tape broadcast last month, he purportedly called for renewed attacks on US troops and noted the recent announcement that 4,000 had died in
"We must celebrate this event in our special way, and make the defeated Bush join us in this celebration," he said.
PHOTO CAPTION:
BBC