TARA BROWN: So, did you ever send funds to your cousins, did you ever send money there?
DR MOHAMED HANEEF: No, I have sent money to the UK to pay my loans, what I had, but not to my cousins, no.
LIZ JACKSON: You did give money at one point to your Cousin Kafeel Ahmed?
MOHAMED HANEEF: No I haven’t given... ah, yeah that was that was actually to transfer money to back to back home to my India…
I transferred some money to him so that he could lend lend the same money back to India.
LIZ JACKSON: Do you think that might raise concerns about the connections that you had with Kafeel Ahmed the fact that 800-900 pounds went from your account to his account?
MOHAMED HANEEF: Well I don’t think so I I’ve clarified that with the Australian Police at the time.
This is a really tough one, and probably why the judges decide instead of juries.
I agree the man deserves SOMETHING. How much that something is, is beyond my ken. On the one hand you have to balance the needs of a person, against the needs of a community. And then you need to realise that as a part of a community, sometimes you just need to surrender your rights for the good of the society.
As I understand it, ASIO got some dodgy information from a reliable source. I think they may have done what was right in the first place, but fumbled it when it started unravelling.
What's the acceptable rate of false positives, to reduce the rate of false negatives? Would you allow 1 innocent to go to jail, if that meant another 10 genuinely guilty people could get convicted on less than prime quality evidence? What if it were 100 guilty?
To broaden the question, how many innocent men would you allow jailed for just 1 week as a precaution, without compensation (or trivial compensation, such as the week's wages) to save 100 lives, by preventing a terrorist attack? How many, if one of those 100 lives saved was your child? How many, if one of those accused was you?
Not easy questions, are they?
I, too, have to admit I'm becoming ambivalent about this.You guys are winning me over somewhat.
The more I think about it, the less I like the idea of giving my money to him.
That "smarter" person was Justice Clarke:Does it prove his complicity? I don't know. A smarter guy than me should deal with it. Have I got the timeline right? I can't say for sure - but the police say they didn't have enough evidence for anything to stand up in court. He's been cleared anyway, so it's all over bar the compo.
Some observations need to be made about this decision to charge:
• The advice given by Mr Porritt was obviously wrong and should never have
been given. Apart from anything else, there was no evidence that in July 2006
there existed a terrorist organisation involving Sabeel Ahmed or Kafeel
Ahmed. Even if there had been, there was no evidence that Dr Haneef knew
he was giving his SIM card to a terrorist organisation or knew facts that
would have demonstrated that he was reckless in giving his SIM card to
Sabeel. In short, the material was completely deficient in the most important
respect.
Your distortions are typical of the beat up tried by the former government.Really? He obviously had more problems than I had reading the police interviews. Anyway, how does Clarke know what was said in the initial chats with Haneef at the airport?
I mean a few tads smarter than Clarke - someone able to pick apart the inconsistencies in Haneef's story. I suppose there will be a book. The usual hogwash revealing how bad everyone else is - everyone else except, of course, the chap who didn't know about the attack until 4.15 p.m. Monday despite dozens of phone calls about the sim card, a day at work, and a previous entire day at home with the TV and the Internet...the chap who said he didn't bother to read up about his own cousins being named in the Glasglow attack even though he had hours to wait for the bus... the chap who told the public that he had never ever sent money to his cousins, but evidently and admittedly had done so...the chap whose bizarre reaction to the so-called first time knowledge of the attacks is there for all to read in that chat session...the chap who says he bears no grudges towards anyone in Australia but wants us all to buy him a round of drinks.
Whatever he gets he should donate to the poor of India or some worthwhile charity. After all, the terrorist doctor who died of his burns wanted to do as much for Haneef with Haneef's loan repayment to him.
But I'm with you gg - that should be the last ever payout in these circumstances - and I still figure if ever meet him, he'll owe me around a fiver.
You are entitled to your viewpoint - but you are adding political baggage - something I have been at pains to avoid.
Distortions? No. Questions. As yet unanswered.
Oops! Mea culpa mate, my reply was to rederob who claimed I was distorting things. I don't think so. I've corrected errors I made before I did a bit of research. I've tried to be fair to Haneef. Someone should have asked these questions long ago.
Too late now.
I'm outa here - Happy New Year to all!
"My message to the Australian people is this: that when it comes to terrorism, terrorists and those who support terrorist organisations, this country must continue to adopt a hardline uncompromising stance - there are no alternatives," Mr Rudd said.
You go on about how the guy has been hard done by and should be compensated, yet you would not go to him as a patient..... well i would not go to him after this. so hes lost me as a patient. and i'm pretty open minded guy.
$1.7 mil all up. and lets face it with that payout you are set for life. especially if you live in india.
mind you, if it was me.... id would not be happy with less then $5 mil.
Gee, another inspiring thread started by GG ... what a blast.
Dr Haneef, who lives in Dubai, said he regretted buying a one-way ticket to India after the attacks but "it wasn't anything wrong as such, it wasn't anything out of guilt".
"Mr Clarke has indicated what was going on, I had my baby," he said. "I mean, I was frightened, he's mentioned it in this report, and there's nothing else." Jonathan Pearlman SMH December 30, 2008
But it might pay you to read it in full - if only to suspend your belief awhile in your preconceptions.
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