http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story...053-601,00.html
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->This story is from The Times
<b>'Those who cure will kill you'</b>
Deborah Haynes in Baghdad, Michael Evans and Adam Fresco
July 04, 2007
<b>AN al-Qa'ida leader in Iraq boasted before last week's failed bombings in London and Glasgow that his group was planning to attack British targets and that "those who cure you will kill you".</b>
<i>The Times</i> of London reports the warning was delivered to Canon Andrew White, a senior British cleric working in Baghdad, and could be highly significant as the eight Muslims arrested in the wake of the failed plot are all members of the medical profession.
Canon White told <i>The Times</i> that he had passed the general warning, but not the specific words, to a senior official at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in mid-April. A Foreign Office spokesman said last night that it was forwarding the actual words to the Metropolitan Police.
The Times also learnt yesterday that one of the suspects, the Iraqi doctor Bilal Abdulla, had links to radical Islamic groups, and that several of the eight suspects have now been linked to known extremist radicals listed on MI5âs data base.
<b>Canon White, who runs Baghdadâs only Anglican parish,</b> <!--emo&:blink:--><img src='style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/blink.gif' border='0' style='vertical-align:middle' alt='blink.gif' /><!--endemo--> said that he met the al-Qaeda leader on the fringes of a meeting about religious reconciliation held in Amman, the Jordanian capital.
<b>âHe talked to me about how they were going to destroy British and Americans. He told me that the plans were already made and they would soon be destroying the British. He said the people who cure you would kill you.â </b>
The man, who was in his forties and had travelled from Syria for the meeting, said that the plans would come to fruition in the next few weeks and target the British first. He said that the British and Americans were being targeted because of their actions in Iraq.
He did not learn the manâs identity until after the meeting, and will not disclose it now, but said: âI met the Devil that day.â
Separately, intelligence sources told The Times that Bilal Abdulla, 27, the Iraqi doctor involved in the Jeep attack last Saturday on Glasgow airport, had links to radical Islamic groups and was plotting a terrorist attack.
They said that Dr Abdulla had met Mohammed Asha, 26, the Jordanian doctor arrested near Sandbach on Saturday night, through their fathers, who were friends. The two young doctors kept in touch after they came to Britain two or three years ago.
<b>The eight suspects are all young, Muslim and connected to the medical profession. But they come from Jordan, Iraq, other Middle Eastern countries and India, and before now there had been no clue as to how they met in this country.</b>
The last of the eight suspects to be arrested was named as Mohammed Haneef, 27, an Indian doctor working in Australia. He was taken into custody as he waited to make a one-way journey to India at Brisbane international airport on Monday night.
Australian police were also questioning Dr Haneefâs friend Mohammed Asif Ali, another Indian Muslim and fellow doctor. Both men had worked in hospitals in Liverpool before moving to Australia within a month of each other last autumn.
Two other Asian men were arrested in Blackburn yesterday after two deliveries of gas canisters to an industrial estate in the town. The men are being held at a police station in Lancashire on suspicion of offences under the Terrorism Act 2000, but police said it was too early to say whether the arrests were connected to the London and Glasgow attacks.
Police sources said that they believed they had now apprehended all the main suspects behind those attacks. The three Scottish suspects â Dr Abdulla and two men of Middle Eastern origin arrested at the Royal Alexandra Hospital near Glasgow on Sunday night â were moved yesterday to Paddington Green police station in West London.
There they joined Dr Asha, his wife Marwa, and Dr Sabeel Ahmed, 26, who was arrested in Liverpool on Saturday. Security sources said they believed Dr Abdulla and Dr Khalid Ahmed, named yesterday as the man who drove the Jeep into Glasgow airport, were also responsible for the failed car bombings in London on Friday.
Dr Ahmed, believed to be the brother of Sabeel, has not been officially arrested as he is critically ill in the Royal Alexandra Hospital with 90 per cent burns.
Several of the suspects have now been linked to known extremist radicals listed on MI5âs data base. Security sources told The Times that none of them had been under surveillance as part of any counter-terrorist operation.
The security sources said that although a number of the suspected plotters did feature on the data base, it was only in connection with general extremist activities.
Meanwhile, a suspect bag sparked a security alert at Heathrow Terminal 4. The departure lounge was evacuated so that passengers could be security checked for a second time. All European departures were cancelled.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,2...906-663,00.html
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Six medicos among arrested</b>
July 03, 2007 12:00am
SIX of the eight people arrested over a suspected al-Qaeda plot to detonate car bombs in London and Scotland are doctors, including one arrested as he tried to leave Australia, British media reported today.
Seven people arrested so far in Great Britain include an Iraqi doctor trained in Baghdad, a Jordanian neurosurgeon, an Indian medic, and a Lebanese man, The Guardian reported today.
It said five of the seven were doctors working and training in the National Health Service, and that all seven were foreign-born nationals.
The neurosurgeon, Mohammed Asha, 26, is currently believed by counter-terrorism investigators to have been the <b>ringleader</b> of the cell, it said.
<b>It's believed Asha and his wife were the man and woman arrested by anti-terror officers who chased down a car on a motorway</b> in north-west England on Saturday.
<b>The hunt for those responsible for the plot spread to Australia yesterday, with the arrest of an Indian-trained doctor living and working on Queensland's Gold Coast.
The 27-year-old hospital registrar was arrested by counter-terrorism police at Brisbane International Airport just before midnight (AEST), after a tip-off from British police.
It's understood the Indian national was headed for India via the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, on a one-way air ticket, but had not resigned from his job at The Gold Coast Hospital.</b>
Prime Minister John Howard said a second person was helping police with their inquiries. Earlier, the Queensland government said the second man was also a doctor at the same hospital.
Both had been recruited from the city of Liverpool, in the north of England, to work in Queensland's understaffed hospitals.
Howard said the government had no information to suggest a terrorist attack on Australia was imminent.
"We have no information suggesting that there is now a greater likelihood of any terrorist incident in Australia than there was late last week," he told reporters.
But he warned Australians not to drop their guard, as the incidents in London and Glasgow demonstrated a terrorist strike remained a possibility.
British authorities say their investigations are developing minute by minute, as they hunt those behind the plot to detonate two car bombs left in central London early on Friday and an attack on Glasgow airport in Scotland on Saturday using a fuel-laden jeep.
Police sources named one of those arrested in Britain as Bilal Abdulla, who qualified as a doctor in Iraq in 2004, and the other as Asha, who qualified in Jordan the same year.
<b>According to the Muslim News, a website that follows the British Muslim community, another of those seized in Britain was also a doctor. It quoted a colleague of the man as saying he had come to Britain from Bangalore in India.</b>
Britain remained on its maximum "critical" threat level today, after police yesterday cordoned off a hospital in Paisley, a town just outside Glasgow, and carried out several controlled detonations.
<b>The hospital, the Royal Alexandra, is where Abdulla worked, staff said, and where he is also believed to be being treated for severe burns after taking part in the attack on Glasgow airport, when his vehicle was turned into a fireball.</b>
Fearing further attacks, police banned cars and other vehicles from directly approaching airports and security measures were stepped up across the country as authorities kept the threat level at "critical", the highest rating.
The series of foiled and actual attacks pose a test for Prime Minister Gordon Brown, a Scot who replaced Tony Blair only last week and who has come under pressure from some quarters to change policy on Iraq and withdraw British troops.
Home Secretary (interior minister) Jacqui Smith said Britain was facing a "serious and sustained threat of terrorism" and urged the public to remain alert.
(Say the right words: "Britain is facing a serious and sustained threat from <b>islam</b>". How hard is that? Until they admit it, things are not going to change.)
"Let us be clear: terrorists are criminals, whose victims come from all walks of life, communities and religious backgrounds," she said.
"Terrorists attack the values that are shared by all law-abiding citizens. It is through our unity that the terrorists will eventually be defeated."
<b>In Amman, Jordan, the father of Asha described his son as a good Muslim,</b> not a fanatic, and expressed incredulity that he could be involved in an al Qaeda-style bomb plot.
(Yes, jehad is part of being a good muslim. See, he's not lying.)
"I am sure Mohammed does not have any links of this nature because his history in Jordan and since he was a kid does not include any kind of activity of this nature," he said.
He said Mohammed and his wife were happy with their life in Britain and had had a son in the country about 18 months ago.
Reuters/AAP/AP<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
http://www.news.com.au/perthnow/story/0,21...173-948,00.html
<b>Indian doctor held in Qld</b>
July 03, 2007 07:57am
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Sources told NEWS.com.au that the second doctor also worked at the Gold Coast Hospital and had come from the northern English city of Liverpool, the same city as the arrested man.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/07/...3351212465.html
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Local suspects linked to UK plots</b>
July 4, 2007
<b>TWO Indian-trained doctors from the Gold Coast Hospital are being questioned by police after British security officers traced a phone call to one of them from a friend allegedly involved in the UK terrorist bomb plot.</b>
Dr Mohammed Haneef, 27, was picked up by members of a joint federal and Queensland police taskforce as he was about to leave Australia to India via Malaysia.
He had a one-way ticket but had not resigned from the hospital.
Dr Haneef had not been charged last night. Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty said Dr Haneef "may have done nothing wrong and may at the end of the day be free to go".
Other sources said last night Dr Haneef had hastily purchased a one way-ticket and had not informed his employer he was leaving.
The Australian police acted on information passed to them by British investigators.
A second doctor, believed to be Dr Mohamed Ali, was being interviewed yesterday but police stressed there was no evidence that he was connected to the British investigation.
As many as six of seven suspects arrested in Britain over the car attack on Glasgow Airport and the failed car bomb attacks in London are doctors.
Counter-terrorism officials have confirmed that British officials became interested in Dr Haneef after they arrested neurologist Mohammed Jamil Abdelqader Asha, also 27, in relation to the Glasgow and London attacks.
One account has it that Dr Asha was using the SIM card and internet account of Dr Haneef, who had worked at the same hospital before he left for Australia in September last year.
The Times has also reported that investigators have been able to trace the phone records of many of those arrested in Britain to locate their associates because they were sloppy and left vital numbers stored in their mobiles.
Police seized documents and computer discs from both men's apartments, who live blocks apart in the suburb of Southport. Dr Haneef's car was found in Dr Ali's garage and was being examined yesterday.
Dr Haneef remains in custody and faces lengthy questioning today after federal police used new powers to gain more time to interrogate the Indian national from a federal magistrate.
The Age believes both men were acquaintances in Britain before they arrived on the Gold Coast within a month of each other last year.
The Australian Federal Police successfully sought the right to question Dr Haneef for another 12 hours today without laying charges.
It's the first time the counter- terrorism powers have been used in this way.
Neither man was on any counter-terrorism watch list.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->If he's innocent, he ought to be set free. But one must admit that some of all this is looking pretty suspicious. And what's more, he was a total stranger to the Indian consulate:
http://www.gcbulletin.com.au/article/2007/.../6138_news.html
Gold Coast Bulletin
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>Haneef 'a good, humble man'</b>
05Jul07
[...]
(Character reference for Haneef given by family. Not useful as proof of innocence)
Dr Haneef's brother Mohammed Shoaib said the doctor had only planned to visit his family in the Indian city for Bangalore for about a fortnight.
Mr Shoaib said Haneef planned to visit because his newly-born daughter and niece had been ill.
He said the 27-year-old doctor was travelling on a one-way ticket because plane fares were cheaper in India.
(Nearly believed it. But just remembered: what a mighty coincidence, then, that he should be scurrying off homeward via Malaysia so soon after the attacks in the UK, and when the British police traced a phone call from another suspect to him?)
[...]
<b>Indian consul Professor Savrs Daman Singh said the consulate had no previous contact with Dr Haneef until late on Tuesday.
"We do not know his address in India, we do not know his passport number, we do not know his date of birth, there are no details to go on," he said.</b>
(Rather interesting. A real islamoterrorist from India would want to remain unknown even when he got back to India by not giving details of himself to the Indian consulate.)
Dr Haneef was considered <b>'quiet, but brilliant' by family and friends</b> and is now thought to be one of the ringleaders of the Glasgow car-bombing terrorist cell.
(He got in with quota/'affirmative action' - see further down.)
<b>Dr Haneef, and two others of the eight men arrested over the Glasgow Airport attack are from the same state in India -- Karnataka.</b>
Dr Haneef is believed to be a leader of the group, according to sections of the Indian media, which have taken a huge interest in the story.
<b>"Police in Bangalore are also investigating two other Karnataka residents who directly participated in the Glasgow strike," said Praveen Swami and KV Subramanya of The Hindu.</b>
(The Chindu being the psecular communist 'Indian' paper that it is, won't talk about the actual community in question - Karnataka is wholly irrelevant - what about mentioning their religious affiliation?)
"An engineering student who was working towards a doctorate in the United Kingdom has been established to have been the driver of the fuel canister-laden jeep used to execute the attack.
"A Liverpool-based doctor of Karnataka origin who was in the jeep has also been held by police in the United Kingdom."
(Stop it with 'Karnataka'. As if it is something to do with that state. When in reality it has everything to do with Indian muslims. No Karnatakan Hindu was ever involved with this.)
Bangalore is the largest city in Karnataka, one of the four southern states in India, on the western coast. It is sandwiched between Goa and Kerala, two tourist spots highly popular with western visitors.
Dr Haneef is the son of a schoolteacher from Mudigere in the Chikmagalur district of Karnataka and did his pre-university certification course at SDM College at Ujire in neighbouring Dakshina Kannada district.
<b>He then did his medical degree at Rajiv Gandhi Health University's BR Ambedkar Medical College in Bangalore during 1997-2002 as part of an affirmative action program for Muslims</b> and lower castes.
(Worrying thought - is Indian tax payers' money going to islamoterrorism? But the psecularists must and will have quotas, reservations and the like for the poor, oppressed terrorist ideology.)
A senior faculty member of the college told The Hindu Dr Haneef completed his internship in 2003.
"He was polite and quiet and attended classes regularly, but he kept himself away from extra-curricular activities," the professor was quoted as saying.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->