BRISBANE, Australia - The Australian government said Monday it would detain a
doctor accused of supporting the foiled car bomb attacks in London and Glasgow
on immigration violations, overriding a magistrate's order granting him bail.
 A file photo of a police forensic officer looking at the
damaged main departure entrance at Glasgow airport, July 2, 2007.
[Reuters]
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Mohamed Haneef's work visa was
canceled because the Indian doctor had "failed the character test," and he would
be taken into immigration custody if he meets his bail conditions, Immigration
Minister Kevin Andrews said.
"I reasonably suspect that he has, or has had, an association with persons
engaged in criminal activity, namely terrorism, in the UK," Andrews told
reporters in Canberra, the national capital. "That's the basis on which I have
made this decision."
Hours earlier, Queensland state Magistrate Jacqui Payne granted Haneef bail,
saying there was no clear evidence he was involved in the car bomb plot.
Police, acting on information from British investigators in the attack plot,
arrested Haneef on July 2 as he tried to board a flight from the eastern city of
Brisbane to India.
Haneef, 27, was charged Saturday with providing support to a terrorist
organization by giving his mobile phone SIM card to British suspects Sabeel and
Kafeel Ahmed when he moved to Australia in July 2006.
Haneef is a distant cousin of the Ahmed brothers and he shared a house with
them in Liverpool before moving to Australia for a job at a hospital on
Queensland state's Gold Coast.
Haneef's lawyer Stephen Keim has slammed the government's case as "extremely
weak," saying his client only left the SIM card so his cousin could take
advantage of a special deal on his mobile phone plan.
Under Australian law, the government can withdraw a person's visa for a
variety of reasons, including if the minister judges a person is not of good
character.
Magistrate Jacqui Payne set the bail for Haneef with several conditions,
including staying away from international ports, checking in with police three
times a week and putting up an $8,700 bond.
Andrews said that if Haneef meets the bail conditions, immigration officials
would step in before he can be freed and bring him to a detention facility in
Sydney.
The move was criticized by Cameron Murphy, the secretary of the Australian
Council for Civil Liberties.
"The reason we have an independent court system is so these incredibly
important decisions are made for the right reasons, and aren't subject to
political interference," Murphy said. "It is not appropriate for the government
to just keep him incarcerated because they don't like the decision of the
magistrates court."
Haneef's wife has maintained her husband is innocent and pleaded with
authorities to help free him, Indian media reported Sunday.
"I had patience till now because I thought they would not charge him without
reason," said Firdaus Arshiya, according to the Sunday edition of the Hindustan
Times. "The charges are baseless and senseless."
In Britain, police charged Sabeel Ahmed, 26, with withholding information
that could prevent an act of terrorism. He was arrested in Liverpool the day of
the Glasgow attack and is due to appear in a London court on Monday.
Kafeel Ahmed, is believed to have set himself ablaze after crashing an
explosives-laden Jeep into the Glasgow airport on June 30 and is hospitalized
with severe burns.
Police also released two men arrested at a Scottish hospital after the failed
attacks. Police said no charges would be filed against the men, a 24-year-old
and a 27-year-old arrested at the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Paisley.
With their release, three of the eight people detained in the case have been
freed and three have been charged since a pair of cars packed with gas cylinders
and nails were found in central London on June 29. The next day, two men crashed
a flaming Jeep Cherokee, loaded with gas canisters and gasoline, into security
barriers at Glasgow airport's main terminal.
On Saturday, a British judge gave police until July 21 to continue
questioning a Jordanian doctor, Mohammed Asha, 26, who was detained on a
northern England highway on June 30. He was detained with his wife, who was
released Thursday without charge.