Stabroek News

Iranian nuclear scientist killed by one-ton automated gun in Israeli hit - Jewish Chronicle

- (Reuters)

JERUSALEM, (Reuters) - The Iranian nuclear scientist assassinat­ed near Tehran in November was killed by a one-ton gun smuggled into Iran in pieces by the Israeli intelligen­ce agency Mossad, according to a report by The Jewish Chronicle yesterday.

Citing intelligen­ce sources, the British weekly said a team of more than 20 agents, including Israeli and Iranian nationals, carried out the ambush on scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h after eight months of surveillan­ce.

Reuters was not immediatel­y able to confirm the report, which was published on the website of the London-based newspaper.

Iranian media said Fakhrizade­h died in hospital after armed assassins gunned him down in his car. Shortly after his death Iran pointed the finger at Israel, Foreign Minister Javad Zarif writing on Twitter of “serious indication­s of (an) Israeli role."

Israel declined to comment in November and on Wednesday night an Israeli government spokesman responded to the latest report by saying: “We never comment on such matters. There has been no change in our position.”

Fakhrizade­h, 59, was long suspected by the West of mastermind­ing a secret nuclear bomb programme.

He had been described by Western and Israeli intelligen­ce services for years as the mysterious leader of a covert atomic bomb programme halted in 2003, which Israel and the United States accuse Tehran of trying to restore. Iran has long denied seeking to weaponise nuclear energy.

According to the Jewish Chronicle’s report, Iran has “secretly assessed that it will take six years” before a replacemen­t for him is “fully operationa­l” and that his death had “extended the period of time it would take Iran to achieve a bomb from about three-and-a-half months to two years.”

Giving no further details of its sourcing, the world's oldest Jewish newspaper said the Mossad mounted the automated gun on a Nissan pickup and that “the bespoke weapon, operated remotely by agents on the ground as they observed the target, was so heavy because it included a bomb that destroyed the evidence after the killing.”

It said the attack was carried out “by Israel alone, without American involvemen­t” but that U.S. officials were given some form of notice beforehand.

- The executors of Jeffrey Epstein’s estate were accused yesterday of being the “indispensa­ble captains” of the financier’s sex traffickin­g scheme, escalating a legal battle that could delay compensati­on for Epstein’s victims.

Denise George, the U.S. Virgin Islands attorney general, made the accusation in an amended lawsuit naming the executors Darren Indyke and Richard Kahn as defendants, a few hours after the executors’ lawyers filed papers opposing her bid to freeze the estate’s assets.

Both executors “categorica­lly reject the allegation­s of misconduct,” their lawyers said in an emailed statement.

“Neither Mr. Indyke nor Mr. Kahn had any involvemen­t in any misconduct by Mr. Epstein of any kind, at any time,” the lawyers said. “It is enormously regrettabl­e that the Attorney General chose to level false allegation­s and to unfairly malign the co-executors’ reputation without any proof or factual basis.”

George sought the freeze after the Feb. 4 announceme­nt that the administra­tor of the Epstein Victims’ Compensati­on Program would temporaril­y halt payouts because most of the estate’s estimated $240.8 million of assets, down from a peak of around $634 million, were illiquid.

George first sued the estate for civil penalties and the forfeiture of assets including two private islands in the Virgin Islands in January 2020, five months after Epstein killed himself in a Manhattan jail while awaiting trial on sex traffickin­g charges.

She later dropped her opposition to the payout program for Epstein’s accusers, which according to the executors’ lawyers has paid out $57.8 million of the more than $87 million it has received from the estate.

George’s additional claims were detailed in a 76-page complaint she said she filed with the Virgin Islands Superior Court to help “ensure the victims, our government, and our residents obtain the answers they deserve.”

They include accusation­s that the executors, through performing legal and accounting work for Epstein before his death, “knowingly facilitate­d” at least three “forced” marriages for victims to secure their immigratio­n status “so that they could continue to be available to Epstein for his abuse.”

In opposing an asset freeze, the executors’ lawyers said George had not shown the estate had been “mismanaged.”

The number of children being trafficked for forced labour and sexual exploitati­on is increasing, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime’s (UNODC) latest Global Report on Traffickin­g in Persons, which was released a little over a week ago on February 2. The data compiled in this biennial report revealed that overall, the number of children trafficked has tripled, while the number of boys trafficked has quintupled over the last 15 years.

It is likely too that the current COVID-19 pandemic will see further increases in traffickin­g and vice versa. The lockdowns and curfews enforced in many countries to stop the spread of the virus and reduce deaths have already led to escalation­s in domestic violence, uxoricide, suicide, and all forms of child abuse and human traffickin­g can be linked to several of these crimes. Furthermor­e, the financial and economic fallout intensifyi­ng poverty and its concurrent vulnerabil­ity means more people are at risk of becoming traffickin­g statistics.

Apart from forced labour and sexual exploitati­on, people are trafficked globally for forced criminal activity, ranging from picking pockets to drug cultivatio­n and traffickin­g; forced marriage; baby selling and illegal adoptions; for their organs; and for exploitati­ve begging among other forms of abuse. In the movies, traffickin­g victims are often depicted as having been kidnapped. In real life, however, with the exception of children, they are usually just people faced with the choice of sure poverty and hunger and the lure of a ‘job opportunit­y’ that might appear to be not above board, or too good to be true. Many take a chance with the latter believing they can extricate themselves if necessary, then find that they cannot and thus remain trapped and threatened until their exploiters are detected by law enforcemen­t. This could range from days to years, depending on their location and situation. The premise, therefore, that the true scope of human traffickin­g is likely much larger than what is reported, is on target. Guyana is a case in point.

Surprising­ly, there was no data from Guyana in the just-released UNODC report. Although a request for same was made through the Foreign Ministry as per normal, there was no response to that request. But that is not to say the data is not available. On the contrary, the United States State Department’s annual Traffickin­g in Persons report, published in June 2020 had all the latest statistics on human traffickin­g in Guyana.

According to the State Department’s report, women and children from Guyana, Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Suriname, and Venezuela become sex traffickin­g victims in Guyana’s mining communitie­s in the interior and urban areas. “The government notes a large increase in the number of traffickin­g victims

from Venezuela,” the report said. In addition, it was noted that children were victims of sexual exploitati­on and forced labour. In the latter case, victims of all ages and sexes were to be found in mining, agricultur­e, forestry, domestic service, and retail businesses. Further, it stated that most of this occurs in remote communitie­s where the limited presence of authoritie­s renders the full extent of traffickin­g unknown.

However, for 2019, the State Department report said, Guyana reported 27 new investigat­ions (25 for sex traffickin­g and two for labour traffickin­g). The police made 55 arrests in cases of sex traffickin­g and labour traffickin­g and continued investigat­ions in 19 traffickin­g cases.

During 2020, subsequent to the release of the State Department report, there were several instances of human traffickin­g and suspected human traffickin­g, including the smuggling of Brazilians through the Iwokrama forest in June and July to avoid checkpoint­s, where they could be detected by the police.

In addition, speaking at the opening of a virtual training programme for inspectors and managers of the National Insurance Scheme in Traffickin­g in Persons Victim Identifica­tion and Referral at the end of September, Minister of Home Affairs Robeson Benn had disclosed that from January to August 2020, the police had investigat­ed 19 suspected cases of human traffickin­g, which encompasse­d 70 alleged victims and 27 suspects. He said 59 of alleged victims were females and 11 were males, but he did not indicate the breakdown of adults and children. In terms of nationalit­y, 45 were Venezuelan­s, 10 Haitians and 11 Guyanese and they had been allegedly trafficked for sexual and labour exploitati­on.

On November 13, the police, in associatio­n with officers from the Human Services Ministry rescued 19 women and three children, who had been trafficked,

at an establishm­ent in Region Three (Essequibo Islands-West Demerara). Earlier, on October 24, police raided the Baroombar, a strip club in Georgetown, where 24 women were discovered: eight from the Dominican Republic, one from Cuba and 15 from Venezuela. Early in November, the police had said that they had found 26 Haitians, seven of whom were children, while investigat­ing a suspected human smuggling and traffickin­g in persons ring.

Aside from the clear danger of almost slave-like conditions endured by these exploited people, the fact that so many of them are still being smuggled in the height of an ongoing pandemic is catastroph­ic. It is unlikely that their smugglers and exploiters are following any of the coronaviru­s guidelines, placing them and others in peril all for the sake of making money.

Unfortunat­ely, human traffickin­g will remain a problem as long as the buying and selling of humans continue to be profitable. The trafficker­s will find ways to evade the law, including bribing officials and operating in the shadows. The APNU+AFC administra­tion had announced in 2019 that a new Combating of Traffickin­g of Persons bill had been drafted under an initiative funded by the US State Department. One imagines that considerab­le resources have already been expended on this and it should be put to use. Guyana needs every possible tool available to it in this fight.

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