Friday, 11 September 2009

UNDUE PROCESS. THE ENVY OF THE WORLD.

UPDATE. KEEP ON TRYING THESE BASTARDS UNTIL ANOTHER JURY DOES THE DECENT THING. CPS.

"Three terror suspects face second retrial over airline liquid bomb plot

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 9:38 AM on 12th September 2009

The three men cleared of planning to bomb transatlantic airliners are facing the prospect of being retried on charges of conspiracy to murder.

Keir Starmer, the Director of Public Prosecutions, revealed he had decided to try Ibrahim Savant, Arafat Waheed Khan and Waheed Zaman for a third time." They are wogs, aren't they, after all ?

A third time.

Why stop at three, or put it another way, why bother with a trial at all ? Oh, yes, of course, the publicity and the career advantage to all concerned, only not to anybody framed-up, obviously.



Historical note.

With the connivance of the cops, the legal profession, the media and most parliamentarians; and with the deliberate flagrant malpractice of the Court of Appeal and in the sure and certain knowledge of their innocence, the UK establishment kept six entirely innocent Irishmen in prison for sixteen years. After the now Ulster Deputy prime minister's conflict resolution skills had been deployed in the Birmingham pub bombings Peace Initiative, a conviction was necessary for the career advancement of cops, lawyers and politicians alike; skymadeupnewsandfilth, then, as now, published made up news and filth. Many ordinary citizens and some journalists, Chris Mullens amongt them, campaigned for the release of the innocent. None in the establishment has yet campaigned so zealously for the conviction of the guilty as they did for the continued wrongful imprisonment of the innocent.

Even though the convictions of the UK native, so-called Heathrow bombers flatly contradict and undermine Gordon Snot's case for our part in the Iraq Holocaust and the occupation of Afghanistan, they are celebrated as proof of the threat faced and thus the ruinous measures adopted in the WarOnTerror, effectively, now, here and in the US, a WarOnTheCitizen. We send Tommy to death distant in order to keep the bombers safe on our streets; this, this Lilliputianism is SnotLogic, the Sol-you-shun, the right thing for the country; fools, aye, but knaves, too.

That the convictions were immediately suborned to his campaign of oppression by no less a jurist than Singing Postman and - incredibly - Home Seckatry, Alan Johnson, is entirely predictable, entirely alarming. A power elite fixated upon removing our slender freedoms will welcome any terror conviction, unsafe, unsound or complete bollocks.



Reposted from politicalleft.blog-city.com

Yet More Western 'Terror' Propaganda

posted Wednesday, 9 September 2009

So-Called Transatlantic Airline Plot

The Case that “Couldn’t Be Allowed to Fail”

From the timing of its apparent discovery, the airline plot has been pursued not so much as a criminal matter, much less as a means of ensuring the safety of the travelling public, but as a propaganda tool in London and Washington’s “war on terror”.

Three men have finally been found guilty of the 2006 transatlantic airline terror plot, which it was claimed at the time threatened imminent mass carnage.

It has taken three years, two trials, and the largest ever counter-terrorism investigation in British history at the cost of £40 million to convict anyone for the plot, which caused panic and mayhem at airports internationally.

The second trial was, according to Sean O’Neill in the Times of London, “the court case that could not be allowed to fail”.

These efforts testify to the immense political capital invested in obtaining a guilty verdict.

From the timing of its apparent discovery, the airline plot has been pursued not so much as a criminal matter, much less as a means of ensuring the safety of the travelling public, but as an essential propaganda tool in London and Washington’s “war on terror”.

On August 10, 2006, British authorities announced they had narrowly averted suicide bombings of a number of planes flying from London’s Heathrow Airport to North America. In the early hours of that morning, 25 young men, mainly British citizens of Pakistani origin, were arrested.

According to Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner Paul Stephenson, the intention had been to smuggle explosives, disguised as soft drinks, on board the aircraft and detonate them mid-flight, causing “untold death and destruction and…mass murder”.

As US homeland security secretary, Michael Chertoff claimed that the plot had been “close to execution phase,” Heathrow was closed down, flights cancelled and security restrictions imposed on hand luggage, which continue to this day.

Long before the first trial in April 2008, there were already numerous inconsistencies apparent in such claims. Of the original 25 arrests, only eight people were charged in connection with the airline plot—Ahmed Abdullah Ali, Assad Sarwar, Tanvir Hussain, Oliver Savant, Arafat Khan, Waheed Zaman, Umar Islam and Mohammed Gulzar.

The jurors in the first trial were shown “martyrdom videos” made by several of the accused. They also heard details of MI5’s counter-surveillance operation in the months leading up to the arrests, including covertly placing a camera and microphone in the alleged “bomb making factory”.

That some incident had been intended was clear. But there was little evidence to back up the charge of a conspiracy to explode transatlantic aircraft. No bombs had been assembled, no plane tickets purchased, and some of those alleged to be potential suicide bombers did not have passports.

The question also remained: why, when such a major terrorist atrocity was deemed to be on the horizon, had British Prime Minister Tony Blair and the head of Britain’s anti-terror unit proceeded with their summer vacations?

In the 2008 trial, the defendants denied plans to explode aircraft, claiming that they only intended to mount a publicity stunt to express their opposition to Western intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan.

This was rejected by the jury, who found three of the accused guilty of conspiracy to murder but could reach no agreement on their involvement in a plan to blow up airplanes, nor even if such a plan existed.

Mohammed Gulzar, who was described by the prosecution as the ringleader of the conspiracy, was acquitted of all charges.

Immediately, the Crown Prosecution Service announced that having failed to get the result it wanted first time, it would mount a retrial.

Media commentators have congratulated the prosecution on success the second time around. This time the evidence and arguments were more convincingly presented, they have stated.

The second trial was also presented with e-mails which—despite innocuous sounding references to purchasing aftershaves and plans for vacations—the prosecution argued were coded messages outlining the bomb plot.

Due to a ban on the use of intercept material in British courts, the e-mails had not been available during the first trial, but this was circumvented by a court order in the US requiring Yahoo! to disclose them.

The order is a sign of the importance attached to convictions in Washington. British security services have long blamed the failure to secure guilty verdicts in 2008 on being prematurely “bounced” by American pressure into making arrests before they had successfully built a case.

This is in reference to the arrest of British citizen Rashid Rauf in Pakistan, who is portrayed as a key Al Qaeda mastermind. It was his sudden seizure, British security sources claim, that brought forward the London raids before news got out.

Andy Hayman, former assistant commissioner of Specialist Operations in the Metropolitan Police, reiterated this claim on Tuesday, writing in the Times on the outcome of the second trial.

Detailing months of intensive surveillance against those accused, he wrote, “We logged every item they bought, we sifted every piece of rubbish they threw away (at their homes or in litterbins).

"We filmed and listened to them; we broke into their homes and cars to plant bugs and searched their luggage when they passed through airports.”

Briefings were being exchanged between the US and Britain over the surveillance, Hayman writes.

“So certain were we that we were in control and had the suspects under observation 24/7 that my top team and I agreed that we could each, one at a time, take a holiday.”

Hayman himself left for his vacation in Spain. Four days into it, however, he received news that Pakistani intelligence had arrested Rauf.

“We believed the Americans had demanded the arrest, and we were angry we had not been informed”, Hayman continued.

“We were being forced to take action, to arrest a number of suspects, which normally would have required days of planning and briefing. I needed to get back to London and had a very small window in which I could travel before things went crazy at the airports.

"Once news of the plot was out, the airline authorities would have to introduce strict security measures to plug the loopholes that might have allowed these men to smuggle explosives on to aircraft”.

In truth, the alleged transatlantic plot was seized on by the criminal clique in the White House to shore up their “war on terror”, which was producing a bloody quagmire in Iraq and Afghanistan and threatened an electoral debacle for the Republicans in the November 2006 elections.

Writing in the Guardian in September 2008 on the failure of the first trial, Simon Jenkins noted:

“It has been an open secret in police circles that Operation Overt, the most complex in counter-terror history, was sabotaged by the American vice president, Dick Cheney, desperate for a headline boost to the Republicans’ 2006 mid-term elections”.

For its part, the Blair government was just as eager to utilise the terror plot for similar objectives—particularly in pressing for the extension of anti-terror powers so that people could be detained without charge for 90 days.

It is these cynical political calculations that lie behind the two trials.

The second jury found Hussain, Sarwar and Ali guilty of “conspiracy to murder involving liquid bombs”. Four others were found not guilty and an eighth, Umar Islam, found guilty of conspiracy to commit murder.

Despite this less than resounding outcome, Washington and London have expressed satisfaction. The Obama administration welcomed the verdict, with Mike Hammer, a National Security Council spokesman, extending “thanks to the British government for seeing these efforts through to today's conclusion”.

British Home Secretary Alan Johnson said he was “pleased that the jury has recognised that there was a plot to bomb transatlantic flights”, and stated that it had reaffirmed “that we face a real and serious threat from terrorism”.

News reports spoke of “anxiety” and “relief” in London and Washington attending the verdicts. The Times opined that a second failure to convict would have dealt a “catastrophic blow” to the “credibility of the Government and the security services” and their anti-terror measures.

The real concern of the ruling elite in London and Washington is that their own conspiracy, against the lives and democratic rights of millions across the globe, must not be exposed.

The US, with British backing, is poised for a massive extension of the brutal occupation of Afghanistan, and the simultaneous interventions into Pakistan. The rising death toll, and the openly fraudulent character of the recent election in Afghanistan is leading to increasing public opposition.

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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

So what? They are only Gligmaglogs, Ragheads, Wops,Wogs, Slopes not proper people like Karen Matthews and the killers of baby P. Rest easy, open another can of super stength lager and see what Jeremy Kyle or Opra has on offer to day

mongoose said...

Mr Ishmael,

It is the same old, old story. My sympathies, I guess, are pretty obvious but the erosion of liberty in the name of security is the most important charge to be levelled at our current government. It is almost all just lies. I see that while I am allowed to drive my own girls to Brownies I may not pick up their two friends on the way without being vetted for kiddie-fiddling. It is just too much to bear. How dare they, the impertinent fuckers?

Mind, I have little optimism that Cameron will be any better, the flaccid bastard.

call me ishmael said...

Worse, I fear. When are they ever better? The shibboleth - The Country is in a parlous state after thirteen years of Labour misrule thus making these measures necessary, Indeed, I would be failing in my duty if I did not oppress and straiten you all further, it is for your own good - will be trotted out, if, as is widely believed, although not here, that Dave Bully reaps what he considers to be his inheritance. The press, of course, is willing some form of status quo to continue - anything just as long as it is not normal people in power, unbeholden to the likes of Murdoch and Dacre and the scavengers like Toilets Maguire and Polly Mascara. Up against the wall motherfuckers, that's the thing.

black hole sunset said...

I am, as Mr Hicks famously said, having trouble with the whole fucking theory.

I litterally laughed out loud when Newnight posited a connection between Rashid Rauf, this bogus airline plot and the 7/7 bombings - which did in fact occur, but about which rather little is actually known, surprisingly.

The War on Terror is nothing more than an all-out struggle for monopoly rights of commercial exploitation; both here and abroad.

Vile, rancid shitbags - the lot of them.

mongoose said...

Mr Ishmael,

Indeed. I have voted for them all - though never quite got around to voting for the SDP but the rest of them have all had a run. Swine. Cowards. Greedy, grasping, gutless, God-awful guttersnipes. If I was ten years younger I'd fuck off to New Zealand or Canada. I shall certainly encourage my kids to bugger off as soon as they are able. What a shit-hole we have become.

woman on a raft said...

What Mr Mongoose said, in spades.

And Mr Ishmael, of course.