THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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'I am set up by Mossad,' : terror suspect

'I am set up by Mossad,' : terror suspect

A Lebanese-born Swede terror suspect arrested in Thailand last week on terror suspicions has professed his innocence, claiming he was set up by Israeli intelligence service Mossad, the Local online reported Friday.

 

 “I'm 100 percent innocent,” 47-year-old Hussein Atris told the Aftonbladet newspaper from a remand center in Thailand where he is being held on suspicion of possessing illegal bomb making materials.
Atris was arrested last Thursday at Suvarnabhumi Airport as he was about to board a flight back to his home in Lebanon.
He was charged with illegal explosives possession after Thai police said they found large amounts of ammonium nitrate and fertilizer in a storage facility owned by Atris in Samut Sakhon province.
But the 47-year-old, who moved to Sweden in 1989 and took Swedish citizenship in 1994, claims he was set up.
“A lot of the material police found in my storage facility had been placed there, most likely by the Israeli intelligence service Mossad,” Atris told the newspaper.
Atris said had been treated well by Thai authorities, but missed his family in Lebanon, where he has lived since moving back from Sweden in 2005 after a decade working as a hair dresser in Gothenburg.
He maintained he had nothing to do with the suspicions against him. “This is a plot; I'm only involved in regular business activities,” he said.
According to Thai police, Atris has links to Hezbollah, an Iranian- and Syrian-backed Muslim Shiite group considered to be a terrorist organization by the United States. 
Atris believes Mossad has singled him out because he is a Shiite Muslim who lives in an area outside of Beirut where support for Hezbollah is strong.
While he denies being a member of Hezbollah, he admits to having “left-leaning” sympathies.
“I voted for the Social Democrats when I lived in Sweden. That may have made me look suspicious in the eyes of the Mossad. They had an eye on me,” he told the newspaper.
Atris explained that, at the time of his arrest, he was in Thailand on business to check on how the storage facilities he had rented near the Thai capital had fared following flooding in the area in November and December.
“We bought goods in Asia and exported them to other countries, including Lebanon. It was fans, copy paper, ice packs used for pain relief,” Atris said, explaining the operations of an import-export business he started with a friend in Lebanon three years ago.
According to Thai police, the storage container contained bomb making material, including large quantities of ammonia and fertilizer.
“The [ice packs] contain ammonia,” Atris explained.
“It's as simple as that. We've never traded in fertilizer. It must have been placed in our storage facility by someone, probably the Mossad.”
 
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