Might even wake up the Europeans.  Beirut connection means Hizballah which
means Iran.
 
Bruce
 
 
URL:  <http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,430160,00.html>
http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,430160,00.html 
Bombs on German Trains
 
A Middle Eastern Connection?

A leak from the investigation into a pair of unexploded bombs found on
trains in Germany this week has produced a strange detail -- a bag printed
in Arabic. German officials won't confirm anything, but the case has ignited
a national debate about rail security. 

Two suitcase bombs found in German trains early this week have set off a
debate on the safety of the German rail system.

REUTERS
Two suitcase bombs found in German trains early this week have set off a
debate on the safety of the German rail system.
Two suitcase bombs discovered early this week in western German train
stations may be traceable to the Middle East according to Friday reports.
Both bombs -- packed in abandoned pieces of luggage and left on separate
trains -- were found by officials in lost-and-found centers on Monday and
Tuesday. One package allegedly contained a plastic bag printed with Arabic
writing. The Süddeutsche Zeitung reported that the bag came from the
Lebanese capital of Beirut, but German officials wouldn't confirm the story.
"We don't give out details on the results of an ongoing investigation," said
Ullrich Schultheis, a spokesman for the German Attorney General's office in
Karlsruhe. 
Railway officials found one suitcase on Monday aboard a regional train in
northwestern Germany and unpacked it at the lost-and-found office of the
Dortmund station. The other was found Sunday on a train between
Mönchengladbach and Koblenz, and unpacked Tuesday at the Koblenz station.
The gas-canister bombs in both cases were professionally-built, according to
Jürgen Kleis, head of the team of detectives on the case; other sources
added that they were filled with too much gas to explode.
What isn't clear is how to interpret the plastic bag. Terrorists who want to
claim responsibility tend to leave unmistakable clues, say experts, and the
bag would have been destroyed in any explosion. The perpetrators may have
wanted to leave a false trail to the Middle East, and investigators say
they're working on every scenario -- from terrorism to the possibility that
someone wanted to blackmail the German rail system.
Does Germany need tighter security?
Discovery of the bombs this week sparked a nationwide political squabble
over security measures on German trains. Politicians from the center-right
Christian Democrats (CDU) like Albrecht Buttolo, Interior Minister in the
eastern state of Saxony, called for more video cameras. "Video surveillance
and videotaping should be expanded in train stations as well as in trains,"
he said. "We should also look into video surveillance on trams and subway
trains." He said another suitcase bomb found unexploded in 2003 at a train
station in Dresden -- though ultimately not connected with international
terrorism -- showed how vulnerable Germany is.

 
Peter Schaar, Germany's Federal Data Protection Commissioner, said large
stations like those in Koblenz and Dortmund already had video cameras.
"Expanding cameras to all areas -- into public toilets, for example -- would
be alarming on constitutional grounds," he said, according to Die Welt. A
prominent Green Party parliamentarian, Hans-Christian Ströbele, said, "It's
been proven for a long time that video surveillance of public spaces doesn't
eliminate danger." 
Deutsche Bahn officials said a regime for scanning every piece of luggage
carried by its passengers onto German trains would be impractical. They
pointed out that the rail system carries as many people in three days as
Lufthansa airlines serves in a year. About 4.3 million people ride 30,000
trains in Germany every day, according to Reuters.
msm/reuters/dpa
 


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