Germany Allowed Known Terrorist Access to Secured Airport Facilities

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
May 19, 2016

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Accidents will happen.

There are always a few bad apples.

etc.

RT:

A Turkish-born airport cleaner known to the authorities as a hardline Islamist had an access to major German airports’ most sensitive security areas almost a year after Berlin authorities briefed an airport safety watchdog of his ties to radical beliefs, a report has revealed.

The employee, identified in a new report by Germany’s Morgenpost on Wednesday as “Recep Ü,” was eventually sacked in October 2015 after four years of working for the German airport operator FBB, which runs Berlin’s Tegel and Schönefeld airports. However, his dismissal was triggered not by concerns over a possible terrorist threat but by a separate incident involving a security breach. He had been apprehended by airport security officers while attempting to smuggle a knuckle-duster into the security area of Schönefeld airport, the newspaper reported.

Following the incident, the cleaner’s pass to the security areas was immediately revoked by the FBB and an investigation was opened into the incident, which resulted in a fine for breaching German weapons legislation. In addition, Recep Ü has since been banned by the FBB from entering the premises of all Berlin airports, Berliner Zeitung reported.

However, prior to the past week, FBB was unaware that German security service and police had known about strong ties of the 26-year-old man to Islamic fundamentalism. This was known since 2013 after an oral tip about him being an active Salafist was given to the police, according to the paper.

Police say they passed information on the man’s Islamist ties to the General Aviation Safety Authority for Berlin and Brandenburg in late 2014, but no action was taken, as the agency apparently didn’t hand over the data to any airport operator.

The security services’ findings reportedly came as a total surprise to the FBB. Information “that in respect of this person other intelligence was gathered on a different matter” was forwarded to the operator only “in the past week,” according to FBB spokesman Lars Wagner.

The Wisag Group, the airport contractor that employed the cleaner, also denied it had been in possession of any data concerning the worker’s Islamist background.

“We were informed about the steps taken by the authorities via the airport operator last week,” the company’s spokeswoman, Verena Wasner, told Morgenpost.