>From The Times

February 4, 2008


South Africans face visa curb to shut terrorists’ route to Britain 


Sean O’Neill, Crime and Security Editor 

South Africans may be required to obtain visas to visit Britain under moves
to close routes exploited by people-smugglers and terrorists. 

Law enforcement agencies have been putting pressure on ministers to overhaul
immigration rules that allow South African passport holders to enter Britain
without a visa and stay for six months. 

The Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) recently smashed a
people-smuggling gang that brought more than 6,000 illegal immigrants into
Britain on forged or stolen South African passports. 

Intelligence services and anti-terrorist police have also shut an al-Qaeda
cell, members of which had been travelling to terrorist training camps in
Pakistan via southern Africa. 

With 450,000 South African nationals entering Britain annually it has proved
relatively easy for terrorists and illegal migrants to go undetected. 

Sir Stephen Lander, chairman of Soca, has been pressing for a tightened visa
regime in the wake of the people-smuggling case, codenamed Operation
Coptine. He told MPs on the Home Affairs Select Committee that the case was
“likely to lead to the reintroduction of a visa regime”. The Home Office
confirmed that it is looking at the situation. 

The five-year operation against people-smugglers — which involved agencies
in South Africa, the United States and Canada — resulted in the convictions
of more than 40 people. 

They were members of a gang operating out of Leicester which, over a decade,
smuggled people out of villages in Gujarat, India, to South Africa, where
they were supplied with false or stolen passports. 

The migrants, who paid the gang between £5,000 and £8,000 each, were then
brought to Britain where many registered as students or found work. About a
quarter of the illegals acquired British passports under different
identities for travel to the United States and Canada. 

One woman arrived in Britain using a fraudulently obtained South African
passport in the name of Swati Mistry. She was subsequently detected trying
to fly to Orlando, Florida, from Gatwick airport using a false British
passport in the name Fazila Saleh. 

Yusuf Mewaswala, 49, the leader of the gang, received a ten-year jail
sentence — his third conviction for people-smuggling — but is believed to
have made millions of pounds in profit from his operation. 

Others convicted included specialist forgers and facilitators, and men and
women who were paid £1,000 each to act as couriers accompanying the illegal
migrants on transatlantic flights. 

Details of the alleged terror cell — which is also understood to have
exploited lax controls — linked to South Africa cannot be revealed at
present for legal reasons. 

Intelligence experts are concerned that al-Qaeda has been using South Africa
as a support base for training and fundraising for operations elsewhere.
John Solomon, Head of Terrorism Research for World-Check, has studied the
terrorist presence in South Africa and concluded that there was “a
discernible pattern” of activity. 

He said: “Prominent global jihadis . . . have used southern Africa as a
possible medium through which not only to stage operations, but also to
secure refuge, money and recruits.” 

A British terror suspect, Haroon Rashid Aswat, was held in Zambia in 2005.
Aswat, a former lieutenant of Abu Hamza al-Masri, is believed to have been
hiding in southern Africa and may have had links to an al-Qaeda support
network. He is in Britain awaiting US extradition proceedings. 

The Home Office confirmed that Liam Byrne, the Immigration Minister, was
reviewing the visa arrangements for South Africa and a number of other
countries outside the European Economic Area. The review is expected to
conclude later this year. 

MPs are to be asked to give ministers powers to order an inquest to sit
without a jury or to appoint a coroner to prevent sensitive information from
being disclosed. Provisions in the counter-terrorism Bill would allow the
Home Secretary to intervene in a hearing into a sudden or unexplained death
in the interests of national security. 

The proposals have generated concern among lawyers and some coroners as such
powers are not confined to inquests into the deaths of terrorist suspects. 



In 2006 around 450,000 South Africans entered Britain, including:

179,000 tourists
43,000 on business 
57,300 in transit
150,000 returning 
1,450 students
1,495 were refused entry 
5,675 were given permission to settle 

Source: Home Office

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