WELCOME TO OGADENNEWS |
||
SOMALI LINKS
|
18/02/10,
Dubai Hamas killing pledge by UK foreign secretary
David Miliband says Britain is asking for answers from Israel
The use of six fake UK passports by the alleged killers of a Hamas commander is an outrage,
David Miliband has said.
The foreign secretary vowed to "get to the bottom" of the case in Dubai, as an inquiry got under way.
Dubai's police chief has said he is 99% sure of the involvement of Israeli agents in Mahmoud
al-Mabhouh's death, but Israel says there is no proof.
Its UK ambassador said he was "unable to add additional information" after he met the UK
diplomatic service's head.
The international police agency Interpol has issued arrest notices for all 11 suspects,
although it admitted their true identities was unclear.
'Tough questions'
Diplomatic tensions have mounted since the killing at a luxury Dubai hotel last month,
which police said allegedly involved European passport holders.
The Irish Republic has called in Israeli ambassador Zion Evrony, and France has also demanded
explanations over the use of a false passport.
Mr Miliband said he "hoped and expected" Tel Aviv would co-operate fully with the investigation
announced by Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
If there was proof Israel had used British passports... relations between the UK and Israel
would be in a crisis
Jeremy Bowen
The inquiry will seek to explain how passports bearing the names of six British-Israelis, who
are not the men pictured, came to be used.
Israel's secret service, Mossad, has been accused of involvement in the killing in Dubai on 20 January.
Mr Miliband refused to reveal what was said in the 20-minute meeting between Israeli Ambassador
Ron Prosor and Sir Peter Ricketts, the head of the UK's diplomatic service.
Speaking on the Jeremy Vine show on BBC Radio 2, he said: "It's very, very important that
we don't make accusations until we know that they're well founded."
He added: "Any interference with British passports is an outrage. We take this case extremely
seriously - the integrity of our system is critical."
Mr Prosor told journalists after his meeting that it is "not the usual way to talk about what
happens in those meetings".
In Dublin, Israeli ambassador Zion Evrony also insisted he knew nothing about the killing of the
Hamas commander.
The Ambassador said that he had no information on the matter and would relay the messages he had
received to his authorities.
British Conservative leader David Cameron called for Israel's ambassador to the UK to be asked
"some pretty tough questions".
Meanwhile, shadow foreign secretary William Hague has urged the Foreign Office to confirm when it
first knew about the fake passport claims.
UK diplomats said they had received details of the British passports a few hours before Dubai
released details on Monday.
Israeli ambassador Ron Prosor on the Dubai murder
However, Mr Hague told BBC Radio 4's Today programme it was "entirely possible" the government
had been alerted to their use in January.
He later said Israel should issue a "robust statement" ensuring its government would not sanction
the cloning of British passports.
Lib Dem foreign affairs spokesman Sir Menzies Campbell said any abuse of British passports was an
infringement of British sovereignty and the Israeli government should act to end a "raft" of
speculation.
The BBC's Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen said if there was proof Israel had used British passports
"for some nefarious uses of its Mossad service - as they have in the past with Canadian and
New Zealand ones", then relations between the UK and Israel would be "in a crisis".
The Serious Organised Crime Agency has confirmed photographs and signatures on the passports
used in Dubai do not match those on passports issued by the UK.
The men whose names appeared on the passports have dual British and Israeli citizenship.
They are Melvyn Adam Mildiner, Paul John Keeley, James Leonard Clarke, Stephen Daniel Hodes,
Michael Lawrence Barney and Jonathan Lewis Graham. They all deny involvement in the killing.
Hamas killing
Police in Dubai are hunting 11 people they believe are behind the killing of a senior Hamas
commander. The suspects are accused of using fake passports bearing their own pictures, but the
names of innocent Europeans.
Six British-Israelis were among those whose identities were stolen. Three more suspects,
including one woman, were travelling on false Irish passports. Two others had French and German
papers.
One of the victims of the identity theft was British-Israeli Paul John Keeley (pictured right).
The passport used by one of the suspected assassins bore his name, but featured a photograph of
another man (pictured left).
Palestinian militant Mahmoud al-Mabhouh was killed in his hotel room in Dubai in January.
Police claim one of the suspects, pictured on the left, went to a hotel to put on a disguise.
He is seen leaving a toilet wearing a wig.
Surveillance cameras also recorded Mr Mabhouh, circled in red above, at the hotel's reception
before his death. At the bottom of the image the head of one of the suspects can be seen. As Mr
Mabhouh leaves, the suspect follows.
Mr Mabhouh is trailed into the lift by a number of the suspects, including two pictured here
in tennis gear. Investigators believe he had been followed from Syria to Dubai where it is thought
he wanted to buy weapons for Hamas.
When Mr Mabhouh leaves the lift, police allege two of the murder suspects can be seen following
him down the corridor to establish which room he was staying in. He was found dead in his room on 20
January.
The details of the suspects and their passport photos were released by officials in Dubai earlier
this week.
The Irish government has said passports used by three people believed to have been involved in
killing a Hamas member had genuine numbers.
However, authorities said while the numbers were legitimate, they did not match records for the
names
which had been used - Gail Folliard, Evan Dennings and Kevin Daveron.
Dublin's Department of Foreign Affairs said officials were urgently trying to contact the
three citizens who hold or have held passports with these numbers.
In a statement it said it took "grave exception" to the forgery, which could potentially put
at risk the safety of Irish citizens travelling abroad.
France - and reportedly Germany - have raised doubts over the identities of two suspects who
used a French and a German passport.
France's foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said it was "demanding explanations" from
the Israeli embassy in France about the circumstances of the use of a false French passport in
the Dubai killing.
Reports have suggested the Hamas commander was in Dubai to buy weapons for the Palestinian
Islamist movement, Hamas.
Two Palestinian suspects were being questioned about the murder. Police said the pair had
fled to Jordan after the killing, but were extradited back to Dubai on Sunday.
Officials in Dubai, who have issued arrest warrants, said the team appeared to be a professional
hit squad, probably sponsored by a foreign power.
"It is 99%, if not 100%, sure that Mossad is standing behind the murder," Dubai police chief
General Dahi Khalfan is quoted as saying by an Abu Dhabi-based English-language paper.
The Respect MP George Galloway said assurances from Israel could not be trusted as the "rogue
state" had broken its word in the past.
ogadennews1@hotmail.com ![]() |
SOMALI MAQAAL
|
Warar dhexdhexaad ah |Daacad ah oo run ah
waxaad ka helaysiin websitka caanka ah ee Ogadennews
|
||
© 2000 ogadennews.com | Design by
Ogadennews webdesigner Eng:Ahmed Mukhtar |
||