News

Cambridge Residents Slam Council Proposal to Delay Bike Lane Construction

News

‘Gender-Affirming Slay Fest’: Harvard College QSA Hosts Annual Queer Prom

News

‘Not Being Nerds’: Harvard Students Dance to Tinashe at Yardfest

News

Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee Over 2015 Student Suicide To Begin Tuesday

News

Cornel West, Harvard Affiliates Call for University to Divest from ‘Israeli Apartheid’ at Rally

British Break Off Relations With Syria

Terrorist Incident Causes U.K. to Order Diplomatic Ouster

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

LONDON--Britain broke relations with Syria yesterday, charging that Syrian officials conspired with a Jordanian who was convicted hours earlier of trying to blow up an Israeli jumbo jet by smuggling a bomb on board in London.

Syria called the action unjustified and ordered its air space and territorial waters closed to British planes and ships.

Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe told Parliament there was conclusive evidence of official Syrian involvement in the "monstrous and inhumane" attempt to sabotage the El Al flight to Tel Aviv and kill the 375 people aboard.

A jury at the Old Bailey criminal court convicted Nezar Hindawi, 32, earlier yesterday of trying to smuggle a bomb onto the plane at Heathrow airport in the hand luggage of his pregnant Irish girlfriend.

Judge William Mars-Jones sentenced Hindawi to 45 years in prison. He said terrorists "can expect no mercy from our courts... A more callous and cruel deception and a more horrendous massacre is difficult to imagine."

Within an hour of the verdict, the Foreign Office summoned Syrian Ambassador Loutof Allah Haydar and told him of Britain's intention to expel him and the 20 other diplomats in the Syrian Embassy.

Howe said in his announcement to the House of Commons that the evidence against Syria included testimony that Hindawi carried an official Syrian passport and met with the Syrian ambassador on the day the bomb was found.

"In addition, we have independent evidence that the Syrian ambassador was personally involved, several months before the commission of the offense, in securing for Hindawi the sponsorship of the Syrian intelligence authorities," he said in the speech less than three hours after Hindawi was found guilty.

Syria has been ordered to close its embassy within 14 days, Howe said, and the British Embassy in Damascus also will be closed.

More rigorous checks will be made on passengers, crew and baggage of Syrian Arab Airlines' flights arriving in Britain, the foreign secretary said. Britain stopped short of banning the airline.

Howe said Britain will "maintain and strengthen" visa restrictions on visiting Syrians.

It is Britain's second break with an Arab country in two and a half years. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government ended relations with Libya in April 1984 after gunfire from the Libyan Embassy killed a London policewoman during a demonstration by Libyan exiles.

A Syrian official in Damascus called Britain's action a "hostile campaign" against his country, and state television said the British Embassy would be closed.

The Syrians said the British Council complex, a cultural center supported by the British government, also would be shut down and Syrian air space and territorial waters would be offlimits for British aircraft and ships.

Ambassador Roger Tomkys, 18 other diplomats at the embassy and British Council personnel were given one week to leave, the report said.

Hindawi's 45-year sentence was one of the stiffest of recent years. The Home Office said he would not be eligible for parole until he served at least twothirds of it.

When led from the dock, the Jordanian smiled and raised two fingers in a "V" for victory sign.

Hindawi, who worked briefly as a journalist for an Arab-language newspaper in London, was accused of putting a bomb in his girlfriend's carry-on bag for the flight April 17. It was timed to explode over Austria, but an El Al security guard found it in the bag's false bottom.

Anne-Marie Murphy, 32, was flying to Tel Aviv under the impression that Hindawi would meet her and they would be married in Israel.

Hindawi denied he tried to blow up the plane. He claimed he was the victim of an Israeli intelligence attempt to discredit Syria and said he was paid $250,000 in Damascus to smuggle contraband from Britain to Tel Aviv.

He testified that he thought the Miss Murphy's bag contained drugs.

Prosecutor Roy Amlo said Hindawi met Ambassador Haydar at the Syrian Embassy the day the bomb was found, and Hindawi told police a Syrian Arab Airlines crew member gave him an envelope for Haydar.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags