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Pakistani Students Arrested in UK on terrorism charges

This is what exactly happens when you arrest people under suspicion and then can't prove anything, if nothing is proved until these guys are released by the police, British police should apologize for their action's which resulted in these guys arrests and which bought these guys under the media spotlight which will severly affect their careers in the future because every company will hesitate to employ these men, for reasons very well known:what:
 
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Another clear case of islamophobia:


Terrorist’ groom thrown off flight to wedding

LONDON: A man was thrown off the flight to his wedding in Lahore this week after his best man allegedly joked to airport staff: “Don’t let him on – he’s a terrorist!” Hassan Shah, 25, was due to take an Emirates flight to Pakistan on Thursday with brother Musa, 21, and cousin Amar, 23. They were allowed to board the crowded flight – but later hauled off by armed police who told them they were considered a security threat and barred from travelling. Shah recalled: “All these police officers appeared and told us we would have to get off immediately. I saw at least two officers with guns and there were another 10 in suits. I asked one what was going on and he said, ‘You cannot fly because Emirates have deemed you a security risk’.” After missing the 10am flight, Shah had to reschedule his wedding to fashion designer Sehrish Rubab, 23. Emirates Airlines said: “All three passengers were deemed a security risk. As a result of this incident, the passengers in question will not be allowed to travel on another Emirates flight.” daily times monitor


Don't ever visit or study in the UK and don't fly emirates!



Hi,


Rather have an intelligent enemy over a stupid friend.
 
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British police free nine Pakistanis held in terror raids
Nine of the 11 mostly Pakistani men arrested during a major anti-terror operation in northwest England earlier this month were released Tuesday, a police spokeswoman said.

"The north-west counter-terrorism unit has released nine of those arrested as part of a national operation," a spokeswoman for Manchester police said.

She said the men, aged between 22 and 38, had been subsequently transferred to the custody of the UK Borders Agency, which is responsible for controlling immigration into Britain.

Two men remained in police custody.

British police free nine Pakistanis held in terror raids - GEO.tv
 
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Students held in 'terror' raids freed without charge

Nine men detained in a security operation intended to thwart what the Prime Minister said was “a very big terrorist plot” were released without charge last night.

The men, Pakistani citizens who were in Britain on student visas, were handed by police into the custody of immigration authorities and now face deportation on national security grounds. Aged between 22 and 38, they had been detained for 13 out of a possible 28 days but were released because there was no evidence connecting them to terrorist activity.

Two of the 12 men arrested during Operation Pathway on April 8 are still being questioned under anti-terrorism legislation. An 18-year-old student was transferred to the custody of the UK Border Agency after three days in detention.

Mohammed Ayub, a lawyer for three of the men, called for an independent inquiry into Operation Pathway and said their deportation orders would be challenged. “Our clients have no criminal history, they were here lawfully on student visas and all were pursuing their studies and working part-time,” he said. “They are neither extremists nor terrorists. Their arrest and detention has been a serious breach of their human rights. As a minimum they are entitled to an unreserved apology.”

The investigation into alleged al-Qaeda activity in the North West involved 14 properties in Manchester, Liverpool and Clitheroe, Lancashire, being searched by specialist teams.

The arrests were brought forward by 12 hours after Bob Quick, Scotland Yard’s head of counter-terrorism, accidentally disclosed details of the raids to Downing Street photographers while on his way to brief Gordon Brown and Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary.

Mr Quick, Assistant Commissioner for Specialist Operations, resigned, admitting that he had compromised a high-level security operation. Ms Smith told the House of Commons this week that the error had not damaged the operation and that the only impact had been that the raids had been brought forward “by a matter of hours”.

However, The Times understands that even before Mr Quick quit there were furious disagreements between Scotland Yard, which is supposed to have national responsibility for counter-terrorism, the North West Counter-Terrorism Unit, led by Greater Manchester Police, and MI5.

Security sources said that the arrests were premature and complained that police had panicked after picking up intelligence “chatter” that appeared to discuss timings and targets. Some of the suspects were allegedly under surveillance while photographing and filming at Manchester shopping centres and a nightclub.

It was hoped that the arrests and searches would produce evidence of bomb-making activity or components.

At one point a block of flats in Liverpool was evacuated but no explosive material was found. Attention later turned to the forensic examination of the suspects’ computers, but sources say that nothing has been found which can incriminate the men.

The Times reported last week that British officials had talks with Pakistani officials and were seeking assurances that none of the suspects would suffer torture if he was deported to Pakistan. A spokesman for Greater Manchester Police said that searches were continuing at one property in the city.

In the aftermath of the arrests the Prime Minister complained that Pakistan was not doing enough to help Britain to fight terrorism. Pakistan claimed that Britain did not carry out enough checks on young men entering the country, and the spotlight fell on the potential exploitation of the student visa programme by terrorist groups.

Ministers admitted that the student visa scheme was a weak link in British border security. The families of several of the men have protested that their sons were innocent, hard-working students.

The nine men have the right to contest deportation through the Special Immigration Appeals Commission. It can overturn decisions by the Home Secretary to deport people on national security grounds.
 
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Deporting these students shames us by Guardian, UK

No terrorism charges were brought, but still nine men are to be sent to Pakistan by a government trying to save face

The Home Office announced last night that nine of the 12 men – mainly Pakistani students – arrested in dramatic circumstances two weeks ago following terror raids in Greater Manchester, Liverpool and Lancashire are now to be handed over to the UK Border Agency with a view to being deported. Another one of the 12 was handed over to immigration officials earlier this month.

You will recall that at the time of the arrests our prime minister, Gordon Brown, informed us that the raids were necessary because of "a very big terrorist plot" (and thats how they creat fear among their own to justify their brutalities on others). Note the bold presumption of guilt which then unsurprisingly was quickly taken up by sections of our media.

"Shops and nightclub were terror targets," read a Daily Express headline on 9 April.

"Al-Qaida terror plot to bomb Easter shoppers," claimed the supposedly upmarket Daily Telegraph on 10 April.

Even the BBC website had its correspondent Nick Ravenscroft telling us that he had been told by police "sources" that an attack could have taken place "within days or weeks".

Well, the media reporting a story in an overly sensational, alarmist and irresponsible manner is hardly novel, I admit. It is the government's behaviour in this matter that is most reprehensible though.

Not content with prematurely accusing the arrested men as being part of a very big terrorist plot, now that no actual terror-related charges have been brought against at least 10 of the 12 originally arrested, instead of offering an apology to them for what they and their families have been put through and releasing them with good grace, they are seeking to deport them while disgracefully attempting to attach yet another appalling smear to them.

"We are seeking to remove these individuals on grounds of national security. The government's highest priority is to protect public safety. Where a foreign national poses a threat to this country we will seek to exclude or to deport, where this is appropriate," said the Home Office in its statement.

What utter tripe. If the students are indeed a national security threat then surely the correct course of action is to properly charge them and bring the evidence before a court of law? Instead the government – in what can only be viewed as a dishonourable attempt to save face – compounds the hurt done to the students by seeking to deport them and placing them under a cloud of doubt. The government's behaviour in this matter shames our country.

It is understandable that the police may well from time to time mistakenly arrest someone and then release them if no evidence against them can be found. After all, not every intelligence lead or tip-off will prove to be accurate. That is the nature of police work.

What is not acceptable, however, and should never be acceptable is the underhand and cowardly manner by which the government is now attempting to ruin the education and careers of these Pakistani students in a desperate attempt to avoid looking incompetent.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2009/apr/22/pakistani-students-terrorism
 
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So much for dragging Pakistanis into everything and labeling them as terrorists.:disagree:
 
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It is just a pathetic display of the UK. In the past they shot a foreigner cause he looked like an arab and then blaimed him for acting wrong. Idiots.
 
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It is just a pathetic display of the UK. In the past they shot a foreigner cause he looked like an arab and then blaimed him for acting wrong. Idiots.

Munir, sir, that story is very popular here in Britain, he was a Brazilian national, and i think he was a student, he was travelling in london tube (underground) when special police unit raided the tube, they came straight at him, he tried to run, and the next thing that was seen was a shot fired straight in his head by one of the special police officer, later it was discovered that he was just a student, and he was scared thats why he tried to run, and that was the biggest mistake this poor fella made in his life, which he paid with his life.:cry:
 
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Leaving sarcasm out i wonder what muse has to say since he hanged his head in shame even before these Pakistanis were found guilty of terrorism,i wonder whether his head is still bowed in shame because nothing could be proven against them and all of them are being released or has he become proud once again of his Pakistani descendant.
 
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British Agencies Lost all their credibility ..

What a Gr8 Intelligence they Have ..

**** Them
 
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Haha... Acha ab Mr. Tim Marshall ka Analysis kyan gaye?
 
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