Wednesday 30 December 2009

Australia to conduct daily security checks on terror threat Delhi Commwealth Games in India, amid England's concerns

as posted here


AUSTRALIAN Commonwealth Games officials are reviewing security advice every 24 hours amid fears of terrorist attacks during the 2010 Games in Delhi.
As England reportedly considers pulling out of the Games, the Australian Commonwealth Games Association said there were heightened concerns for the safety of competitors on the volatile subcontinent.

The association's chief executive Perry Crosswhite said the team was scheduled to attend the Games in October, but the safety of athletes would always be paramount.

"There are reassessments every day," he said.

"I think you have to continue to have a watching brief on it. This is a part of the world where there has been some recent problems and we've just got to make sure they doesn't happen during these Games."

The latest travel advice for India warns of "the high risk of terrorist activity by militant groups." The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade advice adds: "We advise you to exercise a high degree of caution in India at this time."

Mr Crosswhite said the team's security plans were already being stepped up, with more AFP agents to accompany Australian athletes than ever before.

Crosswhite said Australia remained committed to the Games where it's expected to field one of the largest teams numbering 400 athletes and coaches.

For the first time, AFP bodyguards will stay with the team in the Games village, he said.

And he was confident the Games would go on even if England withdrew.

"Absolutely. The Games will happen. Whether it's only one team out of 71 nations, it won't be good for the Games, but they will happen,'' said Crosswhite.

Netballer Bianca Chatfield said she hoped to compete in Delhi, but was worried about the risks of an attack.

"It's definitely concerning and something I'm sure as a team we will probably talk about in our preparations," she said.

Security expert and former ASIO agent Mike Roach said a decision on whether Australia would attend will be made close to the opening ceremony.

He said up to 90 AFP agents would have to travel to Delhi to protect the anticipated 440-strong team.

Crosswhite also attended the security briefing in Delhi this month - and while he said the sub-continent was an "`unstable'' part of the world - he was pleased with the progress of the local officials.

"I'm not a security expert but they've employed people that are and the reports are good,'' he said.

"These days security is a major issue everywhere.

"Nothing would surprise me with people making comments with security in Delhi - it just seems that everybody has become an expert.''

Britain's Daily Telegraph newspaper reported England was seriously considering pulling out of the Games.

The London Daily Telegraph reported British police and security advisers were concerned their team could be targeted by Pakistani terrorists at the Games and felt that athletes' safety couldn't be guaranteed at present.

It said Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland would almost certainly follow suit if England withdrew and cast doubt on whether the Games could go ahead.
But England Commonwealth Games officials denied a pull-out was likely.

Australia's military role in Afghanistan is seen as a possible motivation for terrorist attacks against athletes competing in India.

The risks to sports stars the region was emphasised in March when members of the Sri Lankan cricket team were attacked in Lahore, Pakistan.

The deadly Mumbai terrorist attacks in late 2008 showed even India's biggest city was vulnerable to armed fanatics.
There has been recent precedent for teams pulling out of events in India over security fears.

Australia was forced to forfeit a Davis Cup tennis tie after refusing to play it in Chennai as scheduled earlier this year and England's badminton team pulled out of the world championships in Hyderabad.

Organisers are preparing for nearly 8000 athletes and officials from 71 nations and territories for the October 3-14 Games.


as posted here

ASIO probes Aussie bomb link

as posted here


THE spy agency ASIO is investigating whether a man accused of trying to blow up a US passenger plane has connections with Australia after it was revealed he studied at an affiliate of an Australian university in Dubai.
ASIO's involvement is part of a global investigation by Western intelligence agencies to piece together the recent past of 23-year-old Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab amid fears that he may have had accomplices in the Detroit airliner plot.
Abdulmutallab has reportedly told US authorities that more attacks were being planned after he was arrested for allegedly trying to blow up a Northwest Airlines flight near Detroit on Christmas Day.
ASIO became involved after it was revealed that the Nigerian studied a master's degree in international business at the University of Wollongong campus in Dubai between January and August this year.
But he abruptly abandoned his $16,000 course and moved to Yemen.
University of Wollongong vice-chancellor Gerard Sutton said yesterday colleagues in Dubai had told him the Nigerian was a normal student who was passing his subjects.
"He lived in one of the residences, but he disappeared from those residences and from contact with the university in August and so, as a result of non-payment of fees, he was disenrolled in October," Professor Sutton told The Australian.
Although the university's website says it "is a relatively simple process" for students to transfer from Dubai to the University of Wollongong in Australia, Professor Sutton said Abdulmutallab had not requested to study in Australia.
"Even if he had applied, he would have had to go through the strict visa and immigration process like any other overseas student."
A spokesperson for the Department of Immigration said the department had no record of anyone by that name visiting Australia. About 3500 students from 108 nationalities attend the University of Wollongong in Dubai. The university is responsible for its own governance and management but has links to the University of Wollongong in NSW.
The Australian understands that ASIO has contacted the University of Wollongong in NSW asking for information on Abdulmutallab, but Professor Sutton yesterday declined to confirm this or comment on any dealings between his university and government agencies.
A spokesman for Attorney-General Robert McClelland said: "Consistent with the longstanding practice of Australian governments, it would be inappropriate to comment on the specific operations of security and intelligence agencies."
Professor Sutton said the fact that Abdulmutallab had previously studied engineering at the University College in London before enrolling in a masters degree in Dubai indicated he was "a highly intelligent student".
A spokeswoman for the University of Wollongong in Dubai confirmed that Abdulmutallab had attended the university but declined to comment further, citing confidentiality provisions.
A terror cell known as al-Qa'ida in the Arabian Peninsula has claimed that the failed airline attack was a response to American-backed airstrikes on the group in Yemen this month.
However, Abdulmutallab bought his one-way ticket from Accra in Ghana to Detroit on December 16, before the Yemen airstrikes.
US authorities have launched urgent investigations into how the Nigerian radical managed to board the aircraft despite being on terror watch lists and how he managed to smuggle explosives on board.
The student tried to set off a bomb containing the explosive PETN, but it malfunctioned, sparing the lives of the 289 people on board. The dangerous explosive reportedly could have blown a hole in the side of the aircraft had it been detonated.


as posted here