Claims and doubts on JFK 'plot'
Analysis
Rickey Singh
Sunday, June 10, 2007
TOMORROW, three nationals of the Caribbean Community will appear in a Trinidad and Tobago magistrate's court in the sensational case - unprecedented in this region - linking them with an alleged "terrorist plot" to blow up fuel tanks and pipelines at JFK International Airport in New York.
Rickey Singh
Amid a backdrop of ringing official claims of "evidence" of the criminal intent that contrast with scepticisms by others about the accuseds' capacity to execute such a plot, two Guyanese and a Trinidad and Tobago national will be facing charges of "conspiracy to commit a terrorist act under the laws of the United States".
Trinidadian Kareem Ibrahim and the two Guyanese - Abdul Kadir and Abdul Nur - have been charged along with another Guyanese, now a naturalised American, Russell deFreitas, already in FBI custody in New York. According to documents circulated by US authorities, the men were under surveillance for some 15 months.
Nur was on the run for three days before surrendering to the police last Tuesday. Wearing a broad, if forced smile, he was to openly declare before the media and curious onlookers that "this (the plot) is a big set-up".
Much of the troubling stirrings relating to the claimed foiled plot are based largely on allegations of a convicted drug dealer working as an agent with the FBI.
Also, yet to be substantiated is the alleged link between the quartet of accused Caricom nationals and the high-profile controversial Sunni-oriented Jamaat-al-Miuslimeen organisation of Trinidad and Tobago, headed by Imam Yassin Abu Bakr.
Notoriety of the organisation is rooted in its aborted July 1990 coup against the Government of then Prime Minister ANR Robinson and involving some 144 Muslimeen activists under Bakr's command. The high court was to surprisingly later endorse the validity of a Presidential 'pardon' to the insurgents and set them free.
Since then, "disciples" of the Jamaat have been variously accused of alleged involvement in serious crimes, including murder and attempted murder; gun-running and minor bombing incidents.
Guyanese Abdul Kadir (left foreground), looks to reporters gathered outside the Magistrate's Court, while leaving his extradition hearing in downtown Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, Monday, June 4, 2007.
Imam Abu Bakr himself is due to reappear in a High Court this week on charges of sedition and promoting terrorism by inciting violence, in a sermon at his mosque in November 2005, against wealthy Muslims who fail to increase their contributions to his organisation.
In contrast to claims against them in US Justice Department documents, the quartet of alleged terrorists, none of whom is known to have had any involvement in Islamic radicalism in the Caribbean, or association with al Qaeda-linked groups, are yet to plead to or deny the charges against them.Their family members have been defending their innocence.
Kadir's wife, Isha, and Ibrahim's daughter, Huda, have told the media that while the four men had met at various times in Guyana and Trinidad, there were no connections with "any plot" about JFK or anywhere else in the USA.
Maps of pipelines taken by Guyana police from the home of Kadir had to do with contract jobs in the bauxite town of Linden where he lives with his devoutly Muslim family, according to his wife.
An eningeer by profession and, until last August, a parliamentarian of the main Opposition People's National Congress Reform, Kadir was said to have been on his way to Venezuela to uplift a visa to travel to Iran for an Islamic conference when he was held at Piarco International Airport by Trinidad and Tobago police.
Along with Ibrahim and Nur, he was charged with conspiring to commit the terrorist act at JFK airport.
Last Tuesday, in response to an angry verbal blast from Abu Bakr's organisation that he was a key actor in a "conspiracy" between the US and Trinidad and Tobago governments against the Muslimeen, Attorney-General John Jeremie told the Trinidad Express: "There are extensive recordings of video and audio evidence" that had led him to the conclusion of a link between the Muslimeen and the four accused plotters. Consequently, his Government was actively co-operating with US law enforcement agencies.
At the same time, across in Guyana, and following a media briefing by acting Police Commissioner Henry Greene, on the reported association involving the three Guyanese accused and Abu Bakr, President Bharrat Jagdeo told an official event that the terrorist suspects would have been "absolutely crazy" to be involved in a plot that "has soiled Guyana's image".
Inside the USA itself, doubts have been publicly expressed to the media by independent sources - separate from Justice Department officials or what's contained in circulated documents - about the "unimaginable consequences" had the foiled terrorist plot been executed.
. For example, John Goglia, a former member of the US National Transportation Safety Board, is reported as contending that had the 'plot' been carried out, it would "likely have sparked a fire but little else, and certainly not the mass carnage authorities have described... You could definitely reach the (fuel) tank, start the fire, but to get the kind of explosion they have talked about is virtually impossible..."
. Another report by the French news agency, AFP, quoted Jake Magish, an engineer with 'Supersafe Tank Systems', as casting doubt on the credibility of the plot.
"The fantasy that I have heard," he said, "about people saying they (suspected terrorists) will blow the tank and destroy the airport, is nonsense. This is hysteria. From an engineering point of view, if someone is successful in blowing a hole into a tank, they will just have a fire from that tank. There is no way for the fire to go from tank to tank... It just won't happen..."
. Further, Neal Sonnett, a former US federal prosecutor, has told the New York Times there was also "a danger in overstating how serious or sophisticated a plot really was..."
It is, therefore, felt that as investigations continue into the alleged "plot" foiled in its "planning stages", there should be no rush to judgement in this bizarre issue that has captured national, regional and international attention this past week.
While governments in Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana worry about likely negative consequences of the Caribbean being linked with claimed "terrorist cells", their nationals, particularly those with Muslim names, are expressing fears of more harassment, and worse, they could now face being processed on arrival at US airports.
In the face of such apprehensions, US envoys based in various regional capitals have been offering assurances that the freedom to travel to America by citizens from this region would not be affected by the development of the uncovered "terrorist plot".
US ambassadors in Georgetown, Port-of-Spain and Barbados have been separately stating what is already widely known beyond Caricom, that this region is not viewed in Washington as a base for terrorism by the George W Bush administration, or Congress, though there is growing recognition for strengthened co-operation in the interest of mutual security.
Most certainly this issue of security co-operation between the US and Caricom and, more precisely, in battling terrorism, would now be well placed on the agenda for the Washington Summit of President Bush and our Community heads of government later this month (June 19-21).
In this context, it would be difficult for a very pertinent issue to be avoided at the coming Washington Conference on the Caribbean: the sensitive matter of US authorities' continuing failure to co-operate with Caricom's repeated request for the Cuban émigré and former CIA-operative, Luis Posada Carilles, to be brought to justice for his documented role in the 1976 bombing tragedy of a Cubana passenger plane off Barbados.
All 75 people aboard that aircraft perished - 59 Cubans, 11 Guyanese and five North Koreans. For now, however, the focus will be on tomorrow's court appearances in Trinidad of Ibrahim, Kadir and Nur and, separately, that of deFreitas in a New York court. Will the accused trio in Trinidad be extradited as requested by the USA?
Analysis
Rickey Singh
Sunday, June 10, 2007
TOMORROW, three nationals of the Caribbean Community will appear in a Trinidad and Tobago magistrate's court in the sensational case - unprecedented in this region - linking them with an alleged "terrorist plot" to blow up fuel tanks and pipelines at JFK International Airport in New York.
Rickey Singh
Amid a backdrop of ringing official claims of "evidence" of the criminal intent that contrast with scepticisms by others about the accuseds' capacity to execute such a plot, two Guyanese and a Trinidad and Tobago national will be facing charges of "conspiracy to commit a terrorist act under the laws of the United States".
Trinidadian Kareem Ibrahim and the two Guyanese - Abdul Kadir and Abdul Nur - have been charged along with another Guyanese, now a naturalised American, Russell deFreitas, already in FBI custody in New York. According to documents circulated by US authorities, the men were under surveillance for some 15 months.
Nur was on the run for three days before surrendering to the police last Tuesday. Wearing a broad, if forced smile, he was to openly declare before the media and curious onlookers that "this (the plot) is a big set-up".
Much of the troubling stirrings relating to the claimed foiled plot are based largely on allegations of a convicted drug dealer working as an agent with the FBI.
Also, yet to be substantiated is the alleged link between the quartet of accused Caricom nationals and the high-profile controversial Sunni-oriented Jamaat-al-Miuslimeen organisation of Trinidad and Tobago, headed by Imam Yassin Abu Bakr.
Notoriety of the organisation is rooted in its aborted July 1990 coup against the Government of then Prime Minister ANR Robinson and involving some 144 Muslimeen activists under Bakr's command. The high court was to surprisingly later endorse the validity of a Presidential 'pardon' to the insurgents and set them free.
Since then, "disciples" of the Jamaat have been variously accused of alleged involvement in serious crimes, including murder and attempted murder; gun-running and minor bombing incidents.
Guyanese Abdul Kadir (left foreground), looks to reporters gathered outside the Magistrate's Court, while leaving his extradition hearing in downtown Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, Monday, June 4, 2007.
Imam Abu Bakr himself is due to reappear in a High Court this week on charges of sedition and promoting terrorism by inciting violence, in a sermon at his mosque in November 2005, against wealthy Muslims who fail to increase their contributions to his organisation.
In contrast to claims against them in US Justice Department documents, the quartet of alleged terrorists, none of whom is known to have had any involvement in Islamic radicalism in the Caribbean, or association with al Qaeda-linked groups, are yet to plead to or deny the charges against them.Their family members have been defending their innocence.
Kadir's wife, Isha, and Ibrahim's daughter, Huda, have told the media that while the four men had met at various times in Guyana and Trinidad, there were no connections with "any plot" about JFK or anywhere else in the USA.
Maps of pipelines taken by Guyana police from the home of Kadir had to do with contract jobs in the bauxite town of Linden where he lives with his devoutly Muslim family, according to his wife.
An eningeer by profession and, until last August, a parliamentarian of the main Opposition People's National Congress Reform, Kadir was said to have been on his way to Venezuela to uplift a visa to travel to Iran for an Islamic conference when he was held at Piarco International Airport by Trinidad and Tobago police.
Along with Ibrahim and Nur, he was charged with conspiring to commit the terrorist act at JFK airport.
Last Tuesday, in response to an angry verbal blast from Abu Bakr's organisation that he was a key actor in a "conspiracy" between the US and Trinidad and Tobago governments against the Muslimeen, Attorney-General John Jeremie told the Trinidad Express: "There are extensive recordings of video and audio evidence" that had led him to the conclusion of a link between the Muslimeen and the four accused plotters. Consequently, his Government was actively co-operating with US law enforcement agencies.
At the same time, across in Guyana, and following a media briefing by acting Police Commissioner Henry Greene, on the reported association involving the three Guyanese accused and Abu Bakr, President Bharrat Jagdeo told an official event that the terrorist suspects would have been "absolutely crazy" to be involved in a plot that "has soiled Guyana's image".
Inside the USA itself, doubts have been publicly expressed to the media by independent sources - separate from Justice Department officials or what's contained in circulated documents - about the "unimaginable consequences" had the foiled terrorist plot been executed.
. For example, John Goglia, a former member of the US National Transportation Safety Board, is reported as contending that had the 'plot' been carried out, it would "likely have sparked a fire but little else, and certainly not the mass carnage authorities have described... You could definitely reach the (fuel) tank, start the fire, but to get the kind of explosion they have talked about is virtually impossible..."
. Another report by the French news agency, AFP, quoted Jake Magish, an engineer with 'Supersafe Tank Systems', as casting doubt on the credibility of the plot.
"The fantasy that I have heard," he said, "about people saying they (suspected terrorists) will blow the tank and destroy the airport, is nonsense. This is hysteria. From an engineering point of view, if someone is successful in blowing a hole into a tank, they will just have a fire from that tank. There is no way for the fire to go from tank to tank... It just won't happen..."
. Further, Neal Sonnett, a former US federal prosecutor, has told the New York Times there was also "a danger in overstating how serious or sophisticated a plot really was..."
It is, therefore, felt that as investigations continue into the alleged "plot" foiled in its "planning stages", there should be no rush to judgement in this bizarre issue that has captured national, regional and international attention this past week.
While governments in Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana worry about likely negative consequences of the Caribbean being linked with claimed "terrorist cells", their nationals, particularly those with Muslim names, are expressing fears of more harassment, and worse, they could now face being processed on arrival at US airports.
In the face of such apprehensions, US envoys based in various regional capitals have been offering assurances that the freedom to travel to America by citizens from this region would not be affected by the development of the uncovered "terrorist plot".
US ambassadors in Georgetown, Port-of-Spain and Barbados have been separately stating what is already widely known beyond Caricom, that this region is not viewed in Washington as a base for terrorism by the George W Bush administration, or Congress, though there is growing recognition for strengthened co-operation in the interest of mutual security.
Most certainly this issue of security co-operation between the US and Caricom and, more precisely, in battling terrorism, would now be well placed on the agenda for the Washington Summit of President Bush and our Community heads of government later this month (June 19-21).
In this context, it would be difficult for a very pertinent issue to be avoided at the coming Washington Conference on the Caribbean: the sensitive matter of US authorities' continuing failure to co-operate with Caricom's repeated request for the Cuban émigré and former CIA-operative, Luis Posada Carilles, to be brought to justice for his documented role in the 1976 bombing tragedy of a Cubana passenger plane off Barbados.
All 75 people aboard that aircraft perished - 59 Cubans, 11 Guyanese and five North Koreans. For now, however, the focus will be on tomorrow's court appearances in Trinidad of Ibrahim, Kadir and Nur and, separately, that of deFreitas in a New York court. Will the accused trio in Trinidad be extradited as requested by the USA?
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