![]() Sir Iqbal Sacranie: The Muslim community is determined to deal with this issue head on. After the British bombing of the bar in Tel Aviv, Sir Iqbal said it hadn't marked a growth in Islamist extremism here. He's the Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain. John Ware: Sir Iqbal Sacranie, on the left, is generally presented as the Muslim community's main representative. Tony Blair, Prime Minister: We all accept and advocate a society of tolerance and respect for people from whatever race or religious background they come from. Leaders of the Muslim communities were summoned to Downing Street by the Prime Minister who called on them to help root out what he termed this "evil ideology" of Islamist extremism. Then came London: again the bombers were British born Muslims.Īgain their target was civilians - but this time it was their fellow citizens. Yet they were prepared to kill civilians for their Palestinian brothers overseas. The British bombers' sole connection with Palestine was that they were Muslim. ![]() Their target was a seaside bar in the Israeli city of Tel Aviv.ģ civilians were killed and more than 50 injured. They're sent on their way to the strains of a song hailing them as heroes fighting for the homeland.īut it wasn't their homeland. Unidentified speaker: It's a great honour to kill these people¿ Islam not a religion of just you speaking we got to people of action. This should be checked against transmission for accuracy and to ensure the clear identification of individual speakers. Remember, installing a virus or Trojan horse onto someone else’s computer without their authorisation is against the law – and can lead to a serious jail sentence.įollow on Twitter for the latest computer security news.What follows is a transcript of "A question of Leadership", first broadcast Sunday 21 August 2005, 22:20 BST on BBC One. Sophos makes a brief appearance in the programme, discussing the legality (it’s not) of installing Trojan horses onto other people’s computers without their permission. Readers in the UK can currently watch the BBC Panorama report online via BBC iPlayer. Up until this latest BBC Panorama investigation, the focus has been on the alleged hacking of mobile phones, rather than the interception of computer email communications. It’s important to recognise that there is no accusation that the journalists themselves hacked into any computers – but rather that they might have hired third parties who did various forms of hacking in order to gather information. When a BBC film crew confronted Marunchak with the allegation that he knowingly hired people to break the law in order to uncover information for news stories, he declined to answer questions. ![]() I think I programmed it to stay on for three months."Īccording to the unnamed hacker’s confession, faxed copies of the stolen information were then sent to the then editor of the News of the World for Ireland, Alex Marunchak. It shouldn't even remain on the hard drive. I sent you an email that you opened, and that's it. Footage secretly filmed by the BBC, shows Hurst meeting the man who he believes broke into his PC, who confesses his involvement: Hurst was thought to have contributed to a book about “Stakeknife”, the codename for an alleged spy who infiltrated the higher echelons of the Provisional IRA while secretly working for British Intelligence.Īccording to the Panorama report, copies of emails sent from Hurst’s computer were stolen by a Trojan horse installed by a hacker. The progamme – called “Tabloid Hacks Exposed” – identified a former British army intelligence officer who had served in Northern Ireland, Ian Hurst, as the target of the computer hack. Last night, BBC One broadcast an investigation by the Panorama team into alleged computer hacking done on behalf of Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World newspaper.
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