[Infowarrior] - Father warned US about 'jet bomber'
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Sun Dec 27 05:00:24 UTC 2009
Father warned about 'jet bomber'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8431470.stm
The father of a Nigerian charged with trying to blow up a US jet on
Christmas Day had voiced concerns to US officials about his son, it
has emerged.
The father, a top Nigerian banker, warned US authorities weeks ago
about 23-year-old Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab's extreme religious views.
An Obama administration official told the New York Times the report
had been received, but had been non-specific.
Airports worldwide have beefed up security after the alleged attack.
Mr Abdulmutallab was formally charged by a US federal judge at a
Michigan hospital where he is being treated for burns after allegedly
trying to detonate a device.
'Sewn in underpants'
The detainee reportedly smiled as agents brought him in to the room in
a wheelchair, dressed in a green hospital robe and with a blanket over
his lap.
High explosives are believed to have been moulded to his body and sewn
in to his underpants.
He was immediately overpowered by passengers and crew aboard Northwest
Airlines Flight 253, minutes before it was due to land in Detroit from
the Dutch capital Amsterdam.
The suspect was charged with placing a destructive device on the
Airbus 330, which was carrying 289 passengers and crew, and attempting
to destroy the jet.
His father, Alhaji Umaru Mutallab, is a prominent banker well-
connected in Nigeria's political world, the BBC's Caroline Duffield
reports from Lagos.
In recent months the family had become gravely concerned about their
son, a former engineering student at University College London.
His political views had alarmed his family and his father especially.
Mr Mutallab had approached the US embassy in Abuja, reportedly in
November, as well as Nigerian security officials, to voice concerns
about his son.
How the accused, who had a valid US travel visa, boarded a flight in
Lagos to Amsterdam, despite being on a database listing individuals of
concern to the authorities, is a key question, our correspondent says.
Anti-terrorist measures in Nigeria's airports are haphazard and
corruption among police, customs and security officials is endemic,
she adds.
The unnamed Obama official quoted by the New York Times said: "The
information was passed into the system but the expression of radical
extremist views were very non-specific."
A US official told Reuters news agency the suspect's name was in a US
database of suspected terrorists, but there had not been sufficient
information to warrant putting him on the "no-fly" list.
It is understood that members of Mr Abdulmutallab's family are
travelling to the Nigerian capital Abuja on Sunday to meet police and
government officials.
'Nice and polite'
A preliminary FBI analysis has found that the device allegedly found
attached to Mr Abdulmutallab contained the high explosive PETN, also
known as pentaerythritol.
PETN was used in the device worn by British "shoe bomber" Richard
Reid, who is serving a prison sentence for attempting to blow up a
Paris-Miami airliner in Christmas week of 2001.
PETN HIGH EXPLOSIVE
• Was found on Flight 253 suspect's person, early tests suggest
• Also known as pentaerythritol, often used in military explosives
• Terrorists are said to favour it because it is small and powerful
• Was used in the December 2001 airliner shoe bomb attack
Mr Abdulmutallab allegedly tried to detonate a device using a syringe,
but it failed to go off.
The suspect has reportedly told investigators he had links to al-Qaeda
and had received the explosives in Yemen for a suicide attack, after a
month of training.
Mr Abdulmutallab went to the bathroom for about 20 minutes before the
incident, court documents say.
When he got back to his seat, he said he had an upset stomach and he
pulled a blanket over himself, the affidavit continues.
"Passengers then heard popping noises similar to firecrackers, smelled
an odour, and some observed Abdulmutallab's pants, leg and the wall of
the airplane on fire," the Department of Justice said in a statement.
Dutch tourist Jasper Schuringa, credited with tackling the suspect
first and helping crew members to restrain him, is being hailed as a
hero by fans on the internet.
The 32-year-old Dutch filmmaker has said in media interviews that when
he heard a bang and smelled smoke he felt immediately it was a
terrorist attack and did not hesitate to intervene.
Mr Schuringa added that the alleged bomber had not become aggressive
after the alleged bomb failed to detonate.
"He was actually a normal person, he was very scared, he had a very
frightened look, he wasn't resisting or anything," he told the BBC.
"I also spoke later to one of the Dutch people who was sitting next to
him and they said he was a really nice and polite man. So he was
someone you wouldn't expect to commit a crime like this."
Meanwhile, delays have been caused to transatlantic flights after
airlines flying in to and around the US tightened security.
Measures include cutting down on hand baggage, extra frisking of
passengers at passport control and allowing more time to board.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/8431470.stm
Published: 2009/12/27 02:36:02 GMT
© BBC MMIX
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