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 fenix03
 
posted on December 27, 2003 10:37:18 PM new
LONDON (Reuters) - Saudi security forces have seized light planes packed with explosives near Riyadh's King Khalid airport, foiling a plot by suicide pilots to blow up a Western airliner on the runway, a British newspaper said on Sunday.

Two pilots apparently intended to crash their light planes into a Western jet as it taxied slowly on the tarmac, the Mail on Sunday quoted Patrick Mercer, homeland security policy chief for Britain's opposition Conservative Party as saying.

"My understanding is that (the light planes) were found on the flight line and that the plan was to fly them into a passenger jet either about to land or take off," Mercer told the paper.

The two pilots were among several people arrested after the planes were discovered some time in the past few weeks, the paper said.

It said British Airways was believed to be the most likely target, although several other European carriers also use the airport.

A BA spokesman said the airline had no knowledge of the incident described in the paper.

"We are in regular contact with the Saudi authorities and the British government and we wouldn't fly unless it was completely safe to do so," a spokesman said. "We haven't changed our flights to or from Saudi Arabia."

BA suspended flights to the oil-rich Gulf kingdom in August citing a security threat, but the airline resumed flying the following month after a review.

Mercer was not available to elaborate on his remarks and the British Foreign Office said it was not aware of the incident.

Britain and the United States have both warned of possible threats to Western aviation targets in Saudi Arabia over the past few months.

Saudi Arabia, birthplace of suspected September 11, 2001, mastermind Osama bin Laden, has seen a wave of strikes by militants this year, including major suicide bombings at housing compounds in May and November that killed more than 50 people.

Police and militants have had frequent shootouts. The government has rounded up hundreds of suspects and says it has seized massive caches of explosives and weapons.
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If it's really "common" sense, why do so few people actually have it?
 
 Linda_K
 
posted on December 28, 2003 02:37:40 PM new
fenix - Was this from today? Not dated, but it says "this Sunday". Today?


Then it says:
The two pilots were among several people arrested after the planes were discovered some time in the past few weeks, the paper said. The planes were discovered in the past few weeks and they're just reporting it now?


The story's all so vague.
 
 fenix03
 
posted on December 28, 2003 04:26:22 PM new
I found it last night. It would have been about 6 am Sunday in London when it was filed.

From what it got from the article is that the arrest and seizures took place in the past couple weeks but word of it is just now leaking. This type of discovery would explain the heightened security, the surface to air miscles and the statements that they had proof that airliners were still targets. Releasing the exact details at the time would have crippled the airline industry.
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If it's really "common" sense, why do so few people actually have it?
 
 
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