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To: gao seng who wrote (213391)12/30/2001 11:41:17 AM
From: gao seng  Respond to of 769670
 
'Shoe bomber' explosive linked to Hamas

By Douglas Davis December, 30 2001

LONDON (December 30) - The explosive packed into the black
basketball sneakers of British "shoe bomber" Richard Reid was
similar to that developed and used by Hamas in suicide bombings
and other terrorist attacks, according to US investigators.

Reid was overpowered by a stewardess and fellow passengers
while attempting to detonate the explosives in midair on an
American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami last Saturday.

He is now being held without bail in Boston, where he is facing
charges of intimidation or assault of the flight crew, which
carries a potential 20-year jail term. More serious charges are
expected to follow.

Investigators were initially inclined to accept his claim that
he had acted alone, but they now believe that the complexity of
the operation indicates that he was part of a broader
conspiracy.

Israeli security sources, quoted by the Times yesterday, said
that Hamas's two master bombmakers Jassar Samaru and Nassim Abu
Rus developed the technique for manufacturing the explosive,
known as TATP (triacetone triperoxide).

They noted that the explosive, dubbed the "Mother of Satan" by
its makers, is highly unstable, and that at least 40
Palestinians are estimated to have been killed while handling
the substance.

The Israeli sources were also quoted as saying that Hamas
bombmakers have perfected a way to dry the explosive and mold
it into belts worn by suicide bombers.

Two Palestinian terrorists, currently serving 20-year jail
terms for their part in 1994 attacks on the Israeli embassy and
Jewish community offices in London, were found to possess TATP.
Samar Alami, a chemical engineer who studied at London
University's Imperial College, and her accomplice, Jawad
Botmeh, who studied engineering at Leicester University, were
found to have played a key role in the attacks.

Meanwhile, investigators in Israel are reported to be
continuing to attempt to reconstruct the activities of Reid
during a 10-day visit to Israel and the Gaza Strip last July.

Reid, a 28-year-old convert to Islam who was known as Abdel
Rahim at the mosque he attended in Brixton, south London,
arrived in Israel after visits to Egypt and Turkey. The
following month he visited Pakistan and Afghanistan, where he
is thought to have spent time at an al-Qaida training camp
before returning to Europe.

Subsequent trips took him France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and
Paris, where urgent investigations are now under way to
reconstruct his movements, locate his contacts and determine
the nature of his visits.

Reid, who was traveling on a British passport, is believed to
have acquired his customized "suicide shoes" - with the
explosives molded into the heels - in Amsterdam earlier this
month.

In addition to possible meetings with Palestinian terrorists in
Gaza, it is thought that Reid's visit to Israel and other
countries in the months leading up to his abortive attack was
designed to test airport and airline security systems. El Al
spokesman Nachman Klieman was quoted here as saying that Reid
had indeed raised suspicion during a routine security check.

A thorough examination was made of his person, his luggage and
his clothes, including his shoes, before security officials
allowed him to board an El Al flight but seated him next to an
armed sky marshal. An Israeli source said Israel had received
no advance intelligence warnings about Reid.

Meanwhile, amid reports that "hundreds of Richard Reids" may
have been recruited in Britain, Scotland Yard is understood to
have sent senior police officers to Israel to learn how to cope
with the threat and aftermaths of suicide bomb attacks.

cgis.jpost.com