BLAIR - Certain of bin Laden's guilt

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BBC Sunday, 30 September, 2001, 13:03 GMT 14:03 UK Blair certain of Bin Laden guilt

The attacks killed more than 100 Britons UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has said he has seen evidence of an "incontrovertible link" between Osama Bin Laden and the US terror attacks.

He told the BBC's Breakfast with Frost programme he had every confidence that Bin Laden's network would be eradicated in the fight against terror, and that leaders were preparing to present evidence against him in public.

More than 6,000 people were killed in the US attacks, and newspaper speculation is mounting that military strikes against Bin Laden are imminent.

In the UK, new laws to speed up extradition procedures would be put through parliament in the next four to six weeks, Mr Blair revealed.

The aim is to allow Britain to extradite suspected terrorists for trial in another country without the barrier of time-consuming red tape.

While he accepted that the government would have to tread carefully when it came to civil liberties he said "we cannot have a situation in which it takes years to extradite people".

He said: "We cannot have a situation where people come in and abuse our asylum procedures and are then allowed to remain in this country.

"And we cannot have a situation where if we know someone is a suspected terrorist we do not have the legal power to detain them indefinitely until we find a country to deport them to.

"Those are basic things that we need to be able to do to protect the security of our own citizens."

Mr Blair added that new emergency legislation would also include measures to tighten up the asylum laws and to stop bureaux de change being used to launder money for terrorism and drug trafficking.

He said: "I hope that we will get support from all the political parties to put these measures through."

ID cards

Mr Blair said that no decision had yet been taken on the introduction of compulsory identity cards.

"We are considering all the various aspects of it. It is a very big step. We have got to get it right. We have got to make sure that it is effective," he said.

Speaking ahead of Labour's annual conference in Brighton, Mr Blair renewed his warning to the Taleban government in Afghanistan to either give up Bin Laden or face the consequences.

Asked whether he agreed with US President George W Bush that Bin Laden was wanted "dead or alive", Mr Blair said the important thing was to stop him.

-- Anonymous, September 30, 2001


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