on 09-02-2014 06:22 PM
A CONVICTED terrorist used his brother’s passport to fool Customs officers and board a flight for Syria, exposing grave security gaps at Sydney international airport.
Despite not having a passport in his name, being on airport watchlists around the country and being under 24-hour surveillance as part of a counter-terror investigation, Khaled Sharrouf walked onto a Kuala Lumpur flight under the nose of Customs on December 6 and has since disappeared.
The 31-year-old father-of-four, one of the most recognisable names in law enforcement, is one of the “terror nine” arrested in the landmark Operation Pendennis investigation in 2005 which thwarted a planned attack on an unspecified target in Sydney.
It seems all sorts of people can just come and go at random in and out of this fair land of ours (anybodys).
on 22-03-2014 02:39 PM
At the same time, they infest alternate-news forums to spread fear about ' They have access to all our phone conversations -- they can read every word we type on our computers -- they have drones that can see the colour of our eyes from 1500 metres up -- they have tracked us all from Facebook and know everything about us and about everyone we know' blah blah
Yet they can't find a massive plane, according to the whore media
and while they spread fear about how they surveil us all --- they can't even identify a terrorist on their own turf when he's standing right in front of them
on 22-03-2014 04:06 PM
on 22-03-2014 05:28 PM
on 22-03-2014 07:09 PM
Our Government spend billions on computers and software but do not have a clue on how to use them to their best advantage.
There should have been flags set on the name and special attention given to the person when it showed.
If the Vic police were up to speed on their system that boy would not have been killed by his dad.
In the long run if used in this way it would save man hours,computer time,money and maybe more peoples lives.