Home   +  Weblog   +  Craig Murray  +   Invite Craig to Speak  +   Documents
Craig Murray
Writer and broadcaster


As Britain's outspoken Ambassador to the Central
Asian Republic of Uzbekistan, Craig Murray helped
expose vicious human rights abuses by the
US-funded regime of Islam Karimov. He is now
a prominent critic of Western policy in the region.


Click to find out more about Murder in Samarkand and other books that may be of interest.

Just Foreign Policy Iraqi Death Estimator

CATEGORIES

    Dundee Uni (16)
    FAQs (3)
    Ghana (6)
    Interviews (39)
    Links (14)
    Other (99)
    Rendition (278)
    Russia (5)
    Scotland (8)
    Speeches (16)
    Straw Man (41)
    The Book (81)
    The Election (26)
    The Film (15)
    The Telegrams! (4)
    UK Policy (328)
    Usmanov (11)
    Uzbekistan (195)
    War and Iran? (37)
    War in Iraq (193)





    Syndicate (XML)

« Secret Memo on British Involvolment in CIA Flights Now Available | Main | UK Parliamentary Group on Rendition Meets to Discuss the Next Move »

January 25, 2006

The 'missing' laptop

As you know, I gave evidence on Tuesday in Strasbourg before the Council of Europe Inquiry into Extraordinary Rendition. My evidence was on the willingness of the CIA to obtain information extracted under torture by foreign intelligence agencies, as the basis of the extraordinary rendition programme. I also provided documentary evidence of British government collusion with the CIA in obtaining torture intelligence.

On return from the Council of Europe, my suitcase has disappeared, including all my documents and notes and my laptop computer.

In dealing with the intelligence services, particularly in a situation which makes them hostile to you, there is a real danger of occasional paranoia. But it is a strange coincidence that on this particular occasion my computer and notes disappear, and a couple of factors make it stranger.

I flew Strasbourg to Paris Orly then Paris Orly to London City. This did not involve any change of terminal and there were a clear two hours between flights.

On arrival at London City, when my bag did not arrive, I went to the luggage desk to report it. The gentleman there affected surprise, waited for a while for the conveyor to clear, and then was taking down the details, including my name and the baggage check number. I spotted a handwritten piece of paper tucked under the keyboard of his computer - on which was already written my name and baggage check number. I challenged him on this, and he said that he had already received an email telling him my luggage was not on the plane.

Of course I wondered why he had not told me this, and why we had gone through the charade of waiting for the carousel to clear, and then asking me for details which he already had written down in front of him. Indeed, as he remained in front of his computer all the time, why would he have to copy down the email from his computer screen at all, and then lodge it under his computer, when he could just read the email off the screen?

When I returned home, I called the central Air France luggage number, and they told me that my suitcase had been located at Orly and was booked on the 7pm flight into London City. When it did not arrive, I phoned them again. They said that it had not been put on that flight, and was being held at the airport so it could not be rebooked on another flight. They could not tell me why it was being held, or who I might speak to about it.

An innocent explanation is not impossible, but it seems to me that the most probable explanation of these events is that the papers and computer of a witness to a Council of Europe inquiry have been intercepted by one member state, possibly acting in collusion with another State or States.

It is of course in the nature of such actions that it is difficult to prove, but I think the circumstances are such as to justify the CofE speaking to the French and British Ambassadors to make plain that the intimidation of witnesses before Senator Marty's inquiry will not be accepted. They might ask them for a direct assurance that their employees have not intercepted or opened my baggage on the way back from Strasbourg, other than any search by customs etc not capable of being construed as in any way related to the subjects on which I gave evidence at the Council of Europe.

Craig Murray

Posted by craig on January 25, 2006 11:08 PM in the category Rendition


Comments

"Even paranoids have real enemies."

As a computer professional, I hope you have backups. If you didn't, start doing them now. Losing important data is how we all learn to do backups.

As an leftie blogger, my laptop never leaves my sight when I'm flying. It's always carry-on, and it goes under my seat.

And there's nothing on that can't be recovered.

Posted by: Bob Morris [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 4:38 AM


PS The commercial version of PGP will encrypt a hard disk. If you don't have the passkey, the disk is gibberish.

From Wikipedia

"However, to the best of publicly available information, there is no known method for any entity to break PGP by cryptographic, computational means regardless of the version being employed."

http://pgp.com

My blog has more.

http://polizeros.com/2006/01/19/how-to-encrypt-your-email-and-more/

Posted by: Bob Morris [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 4:55 AM


Never mind government interference - there's enough thieving bastards amongst baggage handlers that anything valuable goes with me in the cabin. That includes my camera, laptop, and any original documents I might be carrying.

Posted by: DrHyde [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 10:53 AM


Craig-
That is awful! I hope that it turns up soon. If it doesn't make it back to London, I wager that it can be found in Florida. Maybe you can ask one of those nice people who emailed you to look for it?
-e

Posted by: NYelvie [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 2:22 PM


whatever you do do not use the commercial (or free) versions of PGP. Anyone who recommends this course of action to you is either someone who knows not what he is talking about or someone who wants you to be at risk.

Posted by: Digital Spy [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 6:23 PM


Digital Spy commented on my blog that maybe he'd appeared grumpy here and that his main point is - if they get the private key from you, then they can read the disk. Which is absolutely true.

Hope your laptop returns soon and intact.

Posted by: Bob Morris [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 9:57 PM


Here is the link I left Bob. For anyone interested in encryption it is a good read.
http://tinyurl.com/dzgda

Here's another good read on the same subject.
http://www.schneier.com/essay-021.html

Posted by: Digital Spy [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 26, 2006 11:47 PM


An old quote which pretty much sums up my thoughts on PGP:

"'Oh please Mr. Terrorist, don't use that unbreakable Phil Zimmerman code...' said brer rabbit. 'Oh please, anything but that nasty old PGP!!!'"

Government agencies like to proclaim very loudly about how they hate PGP because it is unbreakable. VERY loudly. Take from that what you will.

Posted by: Jherad [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 27, 2006 8:38 PM


Craig, surely you don't check your laptop? Even if not taken by the security services, it will very likely be stolen or broken.


Posted by: Ashley Stevens [TypeKey Profile Page] at January 27, 2006 10:09 PM


Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?


Coded by wibbler