NEW SUSPECT HELD IN BRITISH PLANE PLOT
By PAUL HAVEN, Associated Press Writer August 15, 2006
LONDON - Police detained a new suspect Tuesday in the alleged plot to blow up jetliners over the Atlantic,
the first arrest since authorities detained two dozen people last week and threw Britain's airports into turmoil by imposing tougher security.
/The announcement came after police said they raided two Internet cafes near the homes of some suspects and a news report
said officers may have found a rifle and a pistol in a search of woodlands in the same area.
Travelers still faced problems
at Britain's main airports, where flight
delays and cancellations exacerbated confusion over shifting rules on hand luggage.
London's Metropolitan police said the latest suspect was detained
around noon in the Thames Valley area just
west of London. They offered no more details, including the
person's gender or identity.
"A suspect has been arrested
in connection with the investigation and is in custody in the Thames
Valley area," a spokeswoman said, speaking on condition of anonymity
to comply with department rules.
The developments came after
several days of near silence from British officials, who had announced Thursday that they foiled the planned terror attack
by arresting 24 people around the country. Police have released little information since then.
Authorities will have to
provide at least some details of their evidence when a judge holds a closed-door hearing Wednesday to decide whether to extend
detention for 23 suspects. One suspect was released without charge Friday.
The two Internet cafes were
raided Thursday in central Slough, 25 miles west of London, not far from the High Wycombe neighborhood
where several suspects were arrested, Thames Valley police said.
Police said they had increased
their presence in Slough, and urged people to stay calm.
"There is no intelligence
to suggest that there is any specific terrorist threat to anyone in this area," Chief Superintendent Brian Langston said.
Langston didn't say if police
found anything in their search. Nargis Janjua, co-owner of the One World Internet Cafe, said officers arrived Thursday afternoon
and removed 25 computers from her shop and loaded them into a van.
"They told us they were
watching for days and weeks before," she said. She added that she had no idea why police were suspicious of activities in
the shop.
The British Broadcasting
Corp. said a search of woods in High Wycombe turned up several firearms and other items of
interest. It was not clear if they were tied to the alleged plot, which authorities say involved plans to smuggle liquid explosives
hidden in hand luggage aboard airplanes.
Investigations are also
under way in Pakistan, where officials
are holding 17 people, including British citizen Rashid Rauf, who they said has al-Qaida connections and was a key player
in the plot. At least one of Rauf's brothers was arrested in England.
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry said the country might extradite Rauf to
Britain, but had not yet been asked. "We
do not have any extradition treaty at the moment but yes, because he is a British national, the possibility of his extradition
remains there," ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said.
An official in Britain's Home Office said Rauf could come home within days,
and there was likely to be further requests to extradite other British nationals in coming days. At least one other British
citizen is being held in Pakistan, officials in Islamabad have said.
Meanwhile, closed-circuit
TV footage of Tayib Rauf, one of the 24 suspects in custody and Rashid's brother, was provided to AP Television news by a
family friend.
The footage, taken from
a security camera at a small supermarket in Birmingham, England, showed Raub just hours before he was arrested Aug. 10.
Store owner Mohammed Nazam,
who said he was a long-standing friend of the family, gave the footage to the AP to help prove that Rauf's demeanor showed
he was no plotter.
Several other friends and
associates of Tayib Rauf viewed the tape and identified him as being shown on it. Among them was Nassar Mahmood a local community
leader, who has offices next door to the grocery, and Abid Hussein, a family friend.
Abid Hussein told AP Television
that Rauf was a "down to earth person, very nice."
Hussein said the footage
of Rauf, which was taken shortly after midnight last Thursday, meant that he was "looking after his Dad's business. And he's
not the sort of person, who you know, is going to blow himself up at 2 o'clock in the morning when he's doing his stuff, collecting
cash."
Nazam said Rauf visited
him to collect a check for payment for goods he ordered from the Rauf family's confectionary business.
In London, Conservative Party leader David Cameron accused the Labour Party government of talking
tough but doing little to counter extremism and boost counterterrorism efforts.
He said Prime Minister Tony Blair failed to follow through on a plan unveiled
after last year's deadly London transit bombings to crack
down on radical clerics and help moderate Muslims face down militants in their communities.
"We need follow-through
when the headlines have moved on," Cameron said. "But precious little has actually been done."
France's interior minister, Nicolas Sarkozy, warned his countrymen that they are under threat, too.
"The terrorist threat is
high and permanent," Sarkozy said on France-2 television. "It is absolutely out of the question to let down our guard."
He planned to visit London on Wednesday for talks with counterparts from several nations about the plot uncovered in Britain.
President Bush, meanwhile, said the foiled plot is evidence the U.S.
could be fighting terrorists for years to come. "America
is safer than it has been, yet it is not yet safe," Bush said.
Security rules were eased
at London's airports. Passengers were allowed a single, briefcase-sized
bag as a carry on and were also permitted to have mobile phones, laptops and other electronic devices. Cosmetics, gels, toothpaste,
liquids and sharp objects remained forbidden.
Despite the changes, problems
persisted. British Airways canceled a fifth of its flights from London,
the same as on Monday. BA cut 52 flights, including four bound for the United
States. Budget airline Ryanair canceled eight flights out of Stansted airport.
Defense Secretary Des Browne
said new security requirements were being developed for airports, but declined to say what the measures might be.
The Times newspaper said
officials were considering a system of passenger profiling that would select people behaving suspiciously, having an unusual
travel pattern or being of certain ethnic or religious backgrounds.
Leaders in the Muslim community
criticized the latter idea, saying it would further isolate British Muslims.
"There is concern that such
profiling would perhaps only contribute to further alienating a group whose close co-operation is essential in countering
terror," said Inayat Bunglawala of the Muslim Council of Britain.