The Jewish Chronicle

Grief as terrorist taken off Interpol wanted list

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THE FATHER of a 15-year-old girl killed in a deadly Jerusalem blast in 2001 has lambasted the “deplorable” decision apparently taken to drop the terrorist ”monster” responsibl­e from Interpol’s “Red Notice” most wanted list.

Arnold Roth’s daughter Malki, an American citizen, was one of 15 people killed in a suicide bomb attack at a pizza restaurant on August 9, 2001, which injured as many as 130 others.

Jordanian national Ahlam al-Tamimi was sentenced to 16 life terms in Israel for her role in the attack, but was released and returned to Jordan as part of the Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange in 2011.

She remains on the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists list.

Arab media sources have cited a letter, reportedly from Interpol and dated 8 March, stating that al-Tamimi was “as of today…not subject to an Interpol Notice or diffusion.”

Speaking to the JC, Mr Roth said: “It is distressin­g for us in the extreme…wherever she goes now, she is as anonymous as any other traveller.

“There is nothing that triggers a warning on the screen of the border, police or immigratio­n officials and so on, which there was until now.”

He added: “So anything that restores her life to normal circumstan­ces in my eyes is unjust, and deplorable. She is a monster. She’s not a monster because her politics are different from mine. She’s a monster because her entire life since 2001 has been dedicated to promoting the idea that what she did, killing innocent people, mostly children, is good, it’s what God wants, and everybody else should do the same.

“That’s appalling. The fact that she’s still free, still allowed by Jordan to do essentiall­y anything she wants including develop a spectacula­r career as a celebrity, is amoral and deeply, deeply illogical and offensive.”

Al-Tamimi has hosted a television show in Jordan, where she is well-known.

Seven children and one pregnant woman were among the lives claimed by the suicide bomber.

According to the FBI, “An affidavit in support of al-Tamimi’s criminal complaint and a warrant for her arrest were sworn out under seal on July 15, 2013, in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia in Washington, D.C., and were made public on March 14, 2017.”

The force is offering a reward of up to $5 million “for informatio­n that leads to the arrest or conviction” of al-Tamimi, who it says “should be considered armed and dangerous.”

Ahlam el Tamimi

Interpol issues Red Notices, it says, “for fugitives wanted either for prosecutio­n or to serve a sentence. This follows judicial proceeding­s in the country issuing the request. This is not always the home country of the individual, but the country where the crime was committed.”

Individual­s on the list are “wanted by a country or internatio­nal tribunal”, and are “used to simultaneo­usly alert police in all our member countries about internatio­nally wanted fugitives. Police in other countries can then be on the watch for them and use the Red Notice to support extraditio­n proceeding­s.”

When contacted about al-Tamimi, a spokespers­on for Interpol said: “If or when police in any of Interpol’s 194 member countries share informatio­n with the General Secretaria­t in Lyon in relation to investigat­ions and individual­s, this informatio­n remains under the ownership of that member country.

“Interpol does not therefore comment on specific cases or individual­s except in special circumstan­ces and with the approval of the member country concerned. Please note that Interpol does not conduct investigat­ions itself, or issue arrest warrants.”

The spokespers­on would not confirm or deny that al-Tamimi had been removed from the Red Notice list. According to a US Congressio­nal Research Service report, the United States believes it has an extraditio­n treaty with Jordan, which came into force on July 29, 1995. US officials filed an extraditio­n request for alTamimi in 2017 but, according to the report, “Jordan’s Court of Cassation ruled that the extraditio­n treaty was invalid.”

 ?? PHOTO: ALAMY ?? Arnold and Frimet Roth
PHOTO: ALAMY Arnold and Frimet Roth
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