
For the first time, the Australian Federal Police has accepted that those crucial evidences against Indian doctor Mohammed Haneef is erroneous. Earlier, the POlice had claimed that they had seized his mobile phone SIM card from the site of the UK car bomb plot.
The police had informed the Brisbane Court that the SIM card was found at site of the Glasgow attack.
The prosecutors had allegedly claimed in the court about this proof when the court was hearing the Haneef’s bail plea. Now, the AFP sources have reportedly told Fairfax newspapers in Australia that that evidence was wrong.
Now, the disclosure has caused fresh suspicions and uncertainties over the manner in which the AFP is handling the Haneef case. According to the report, the investigating team had recovered the SIM card, the smart card in mobile phones, in the possession of Sabeel Ahmed, not from the terror plot site at Glasgow.
Sabeel Ahmed is the brother of Kafeel Ahmed, the suspected bomber linked with attack in to Glasgow Airport. Sabeel is also a distant cousin of Mohammed Haneef. The AFP had seized the mobile SIM card from Sabeel Ahmed in Liverpool that is hundreds of kilometres away from Glasgow airport.
When court had asked why Haneef would have provided his SIM card if he was aware that the SIM card may be used in terror attack, the prosecutor from the Office of the commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Clive Porritt told the court that it had been anticipated that in the planned explosion, the SIM card would be destroyed.
According to the Australian daily, despite of the known error in evidence for sometimes, the AFP officials did not take any step to correct the public record.
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