Forest Gate Raid
This article is part of the Counter-Terrorism Portal project of Spinwatch. |
The Forest Gate Raid was a counter-terrorism operation that was conducted on 2 June 2006 on suspicion that a “chemical weapon” was being produced at a house in Forest Gate by two brothers – Abdul Kahar Kalam, who was shot by police during the raid, and his brother, Abdul Koyair.
Security Sources stated that the operation was based on intelligence that indicated a “viable” chemical device was present at the house that had the potential of producing casualties “in double or even triple figures”. This was the official reason for the operation.[1]
No chemical weapon was ever found and both men were released without any charges being brought against them.
The Raid
The raid was carried out by approximately 250-300 police officers, including armed police officers. They were backed up by fire-fighters, health officials and biochemical experts from the MoD biological warfare research centre at Porton Down.[2] Porton Down Members swept the house and ensured it was safe from any chemical or biological dangers.[3]
Whilst the raid and investigation was ongoing, an air exclusion zone was imposed around the scene, which banned aircraft flying below 2,500 feet above the site of the site - the house of the two brothers.[4]
Notes
- ↑ Raid police hunt chemical device, BBC News, 3 June 2006, accessed 03.09.10
- ↑ Ben Taylor, ‘Police won’t find a thing; wounded terror suspect hits out as poison bomb officers scour his home; backlash over ‘cyanide’ swoop’, The Daily Mail, 5 June 2006, accessed via LexisNexis on 01.09.10
- ↑ Justin Penrose, ‘Diagram of poison bomb sparked raid; experts warned of deadly threat’, Sunday Mirror, 4 June 2006, accessed via LexisNexis on 01.09.10
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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