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Explosives on plane to Ireland

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Thursday January 07, 2010 17:41author by tomeile

Police arrested Slovak national, Stefan Gonda, on Tuesday after he had unwittingly brought plastic explosives into Ireland three days earlier on a plane. He was later released without charge . The pilot of the Danube Wings plane had been informed before take off from Poprad-Tatry airport in eastern Slovakia that the explosive material was on board , but decided to carry on with the plane’s scheduled flight .
Slovak chief of border police Tibor Mako said the explosives had been attached to the straps of the man's backpack “to test security at Slovakia’s Poprad-Tatry Airport.”

The Slovakian ministry of the interior said that a telex was sent by the Poprad-Tatry airport authorities to Dublin airport while the flight was still in the air to Dublin , although Dublin Airport Authority said the first it knew of any plastic explosives entering Dublin was when the Slovakians rang them on Tuesday morning. The DAA immediately rang gardaí and the force put a bomb search and disposal operation in place.A spokesman for Irish Justice Minister Dermot Ahern said it "beggared belief" that the man had been allowed to board the flight .

The Irish Times today has a copy of the fax sent by Slovak authorities asking Dublin airport to kindly return the explosives.
“Dear Colleagues, please be informed that we have received info from police department of (Tatry Airport) that there is forgotten sample of explosive material in baggage on bord of flight no V58230.”
“The sample of grey colour is in plastic bag (size 5x5cm) in the rare part of black backpack (under harnesses) in hold no 3 or 4. The sample is not dangerous, it is only used for dog training. It is not able to cause explosion nor fire (no power source of detonator is included) Pilot in command has been informed about this sample by ATC (air traffic control). We would like to kindly ask you to return that sample with flight no V58231. Thx for coop.”

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author by tomeilepublication date Thu Jan 07, 2010 18:42author email tomeile at hotmail dot co dot ukauthor address author phone

Perhaps it could be said that aircraft security was being monitored by the Slovak authorities so as to prevent a future atrocity .But the unexplained lack of coordination between national security agencies is baffling given the levels of paranoia passengers are regularly subjected to by airport security post-9/11 .

A wsws article here on the security “ lapses” that allowed Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab to nearly bring down a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day by detonating plastic explosives hidden in his underwear.
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/jan2010/obam-j06.shtml

author by Fuckwitspublication date Fri Jan 08, 2010 08:58author address author phone

Charles De Gaulle airport also came under scrutiny during a failed test of airline security. In late 2004 French Police slipped a cell-phone sized package of plastic explosives into a random passenger's luggage to test airline security. The luggage was picked up as containing explosives by one of the Explosives sniffer dogs, however when the Police left the luggage unattended to fetch a second dog to carry out the same test, the bag was collected by its owner without their knowledge. The passenger was not made aware of their unwitting participation in the test, and the Police were unable to trace them. To date the explosives are still missing.

What these idiots get up to makes a mockery of what they put us through at airports. Pure nonsense

Al Q bombers with some peroxide hair spray hidden up their bums are far less of a threat than these guys plonking industrial grade high explosives into people's bags

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6672643/



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