Date : 06/11/2010
LONDON, Nov 6 (KUNA) -- Interpol, the largest police organisation in the
world, issued a global security alert to its 188 member countries Saturday
after explosives were found on two US-bound planes last week, it was reported
here.
The memo, known as an Orange Notice, provides details of the home-made bomb
found hidden in a printer cartridge on board a plane from Yemen destined for
Chicago at East Midlands Airport, England, last week, the BBC said.
It also includes information about a similar package seized at the FedEx
cargo hold in Dubai from another plane heading to Chicago from Yemen.
Interpol secretary-general Ronald Noble said: "The information contained in
this Orange Notice will allow police services and other law enforcement
agencies to take all appropriate measures to identify potentially lethal
devices, and we particularly thank the Interpol National Central Bureau in Abu
Dhabi and the Dubai Police for their close co-operation in this regard."
Speaking ahead of the Interpol General Assembly in Qatar this Monday, Noble
added: "Given that these devices were hidden inside what appeared to be normal
packages, an unrestricted version of the Orange Notice has also been published
by Interpol.
"We have seen on many occasions that vigilance by members of the public can
be crucial in alerting law enforcement to potential threats, as evidenced by
the arrest of the Times Square bomb suspect in May this year in New York.
"What is clear is that vigilance and information-sharing are essential,
and, as the world's largest police organisation, it is our primary mission to
ensure that the information needed to help protect citizens and secure borders
is where it needs to be.
"The decision to share information via Interpol means that each of our 188
member countries can benefit from the thorough investigations being carried
out by all of the affected countries, which may prove vital in assisting
global law enforcement prevent future attacks."
The Orange Notice includes photographs and technical details of the devices
as well as key features of a suspicious package.
Interpol said common indicators included packages which felt unbalanced,
used an excessive amount of wrapping tape or had a "strange odour".
It also said suspect letters or packages might have an invalid return
address or a badly typed label.
The box seized in Dubai, shown in photographs on the Orange Notice, was
heavily sealed with FedEx and Falcon Aviation Services tape and had anomalies
in the address.
The package found in the UK contained a mobile phone battery and a
detonator fixed to a motherboard as well as the explosive powder
pentaerythritol tetranitrate (PETN).
Interpol described it as a "functional device" which was "powerful enough
to bring down the aircraft. Parts of East Midlands Airport were sealed off
after the device was found on October 29.
Direct flights from Yemen to the UK were suspended by Home Secretary Teresa
May and a ban on toner cartridges was imposed for at least a month. (end)
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