Tuesday, October 06, 2009

muslim Bomb hoaxer closed airport to prevent UK authorities deporting him to Pakistan

A failed asylum seeker shut down an airport and put three others on red alert with a series of hoax calls warning of suicide bomb attacks.

Salman Mukaty, 27, was trying to stop himself being deported to Pakistan after more than nine years in the UK.

He told police that 16 passengers carrying 'suicide bomb materials' were about to board planes in airports across the country.

His false warnings forced Leeds-Bradford airport to close for one hour and put Heathrow, Birmingham and Manchester on red alert.

Alan Blake, prosecuting said it was 'hard to conceive a more dramatic, more horrific threat' than the series of calls made on March 27.

Mukaty believed he would avoid deportation as it would 'not be safe for him to return to Pakistan once he had helped the UK authorities', he added.

Mukaty, of Slough, Berkshire, claimed he had been tipped off about the bombs by an extremist friend. But, said Mr Blake, his account was 'riddled with lies and inconsistencies'.
'The calls were made specifically to service his own interests. He is a dangerous and selfish man,' he told Reading Crown Court.

'What better way for Mr Mukaty to show that it would be unjust for him to be returned to Pakistan than to show how useful he was to the authorities?'

Mukaty, born in Karachi, had been appealing against his asylum refusal and met immigration officials on the day of the hoax calls.
He claimed to have genuinely believed the information given to him by someone he called Arif Khan, who he said had links with Islamic extremists in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

More...
Lockerbie bomber Al Megrahi renews campaign to clear his name

Five freed terrorists sent back to prison after breaching parole

Mukaty said he had known Khan since he was four but his friend has never been tracked down. Mr Blake dismissed Khan as a myth.

Harold Persaud, defending, said that Mukaty genuinely feared that 'innocent people would die' after he was tipped off.

'The person who is given that information would very rarely be in a position to judge whether that information is credible,' he told the court.

'He still believes what he did was right giving what he knew.'

It took the jury less than two hours to convict Mukaty of four counts of communicating false information with intent at the airports.

He will be sentenced on November 6. The offence carries a maximum term of seven years.
The early-morning bomb scare caused misery for hundreds of passengers at Leeds-Bradford airport. There was traffic chaos as roads were closed and fire engines raced to the scene.

Once the airport reopened, it took another two hours for services to return to normal. Around 2.87million passengers use Leeds-Bradford every year.

A spokesman for the UK Border Agency said an independent immigration judge was due to rule on Mukaty's asylum appeal.

Detective Chief Superintendant George Turner, head of the South East Counter Terrorism Unit, said: 'This case sends a clear message that this sort of offence will be thoroughly investigated and dealt with robustly.'

No comments: