Kuwait gets Interpol list on Dubai hit … Suspects in Israel Iran challenges West
KUWAIT CITY, March 1, (Agencies): The Interpol has given its counterpart in Kuwait the names of 15 more people who are sought by it in the assassination of the Hamas leader Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh who was found murdered inside his hotel room in the United Arab Emirates, reports Al-Dar daily.
However, according to reliable sources Kuwait is expected to receive an official request by the end of this week.
Earlier the Interpol had given Kuwait the names of 11 people who allegedly used British, Irish and German passports to kill the Hamas leader.
The Chairman of Kuwait’s Interpol Counselor Mohammad Rashed Al-Duaij had accordingly issued instructions at all land and sea ports.
Dubai’s police chief said on Monday the suspects in a Hamas chief’s assassination in the emirate are now hiding out in Israel to avoid arrest and urged the Jewish state to wage its wars at home.
“I say (the suspects) are in Israel. Israel says they are in Israel,” police chief Lieutenant General Dahi Khalfan told a news conference in the Emirati capital. “If they stay in Israel, they won’t be arrested.”
But “eventually they will leave” and can then be detained, he added, referring to a list of suspects passed on to Interpol.
Twelve British, six Irish, four French, three Australian and one German passports were used by 26 named suspects, according to Dubai police, who say they had fled the southern Gulf emirate on flights to Europe and Asia.
Police say they are convinced the Israeli spy agency Mossad carried out the Cold War-style hit.
Khalfan also called on Israel to fight its conflicts on its own soil. “When (Israel) has a conflict, let it wage the war on its own land, not on our land,” he said.
In a newspaper report published on Monday, Khalfan said a 27th suspect had been identified, also travelling on an European passport but this time unspecified.
Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Monday that the five Western nations whose passports were used “should answer to the world” over the murder.
Speaking in Geneva, Mottaki wondered whether their “security services, intelligence people or a part of their government have been involved, have been informed,” and possibly coordinated the assassination.
Khalfan said earlier all of the Western countries were cooperating with Dubai’s investigation. “All the states are cooperating with us, and we appreciate their cooperation,” he said.
In many of the stolen identity cases, the documents appeared either to have been faked or obtained illegally.
Khalfan said the suspects would not have dared used US passports. “I think Israel was scared of provoking a clash with the United States which it considers its best friend,” he told Al-Khaleej newspaper.
The Emirati central bank is helping to trace the credit cards used by several suspects, Khalfan said in another local paper. Dubai police says 14 cards issued by MetaBank of the United States were used.
Israel has sought to play down the row, saying there is no hard proof of its involvement.
Officials have refused to confirm or deny the reports, but Israeli media see the killing as Mossad’s work and the probe has caused a diplomatic headache for the Jewish state with the countries whose passports were used summoning its envoys to hear protests.
Former Mossad chief Danny Yatom said Western intelligence services also targeted “terrorists who threaten their countries,” stressing he was not commenting on the Mabhuh case.
“No terrorist can claim the least immunity... All those among the terrorists who conceive, execute and recruit must be pursued,” Yatom said.
On Sunday, Khalfan’s deputy, Khamis Mattar al-Mazeina, said in a statement the killers had used the drug succinylcholine “to sedate Mabhuh before they suffocated him.”
Succinylcholine, also known as suxamethonium, is used to induce muscle relaxation and is favoured by anaesthetists and emergency doctors because of its fast onset.
In addition to the suspects with Western passports, police have announced they have two Palestinians in custody, both residents of the emirate who had fled but were extradited back from Jordan.
Khalfan said on Sunday that one of the Palestinians being questioned had allegedly provided “logistics assistance” to the hit squad.
According to the Emirati daily Al-Ittihad, a third Palestinian is also being held for questioning. But there has been no official confirmation and the police have not included the Palestinians among the 27 suspects.
Khalfan reiterated in Abu Dhabi his theory of a leak inside Hamas that the Palestinian group has previously rejected.
Identity
Following the assassination of a Hamas operative, Dubai police will attempt to identify Israelis traveling on foreign passports by assessing their physical features and manner of speaking upon arrival, the police chief said.
Lt Gen Dahi Khalfan Tamim said travelers suspected of being Israeli will not be allowed into the Gulf country even if they arrive with alternative passports. The Emirates will “deny entry to anyone suspected of having Israeli citizenship,” Tamim said.
The move follows the killing of a senior Hamas operative in Dubai, blamed by the Emirates authorities on Israel’s Mossad spy agency.
“It is disgraceful how the killers abused European (and other) passports and UAE soil to assassinate,” Tamim told reporters at the sidelines of a security conference in Abu Dhabi.
“We will not allow those who hold Israeli passports into the UAE no matter what other passport they have,” Tamim said.
He did not explain what procedures would be used to identify the Israeli visitors, except that the police will “develop skills” to recognize Israelis by “physical features and the way they speak.”
It was also unclear if the measure would apply to Israeli athletes competing in international sports events in the Emirates and how it could affect Israel’s participation in international meetings here.
Last month, Israel’s Shahar Peer was allowed to play in a Dubai tennis tournament, a year after the event’s organizers were fined $300,000 for denying her a visa to participate in the international tournament citing security concerns.
Earlier this year an Israeli cabinet minister was allowed into the Emirates for the first time to attend a conference on alternative energy in Abu Dhabi, where International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) is based. The agency’s activities have to be open to Israel because it is a member state.
Many Israelis hold passports of other countries, allowing them to travel to states that have no diplomatic relations with the Jewish state, including all Arab countries, save Egypt and Jordan.