Showing posts with label Dubai. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dubai. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

All That Glitters: ATM in UAE Hotel Distributes Gold Bars

I. So. Freakin'. Want. This. [Actually I could've really used something like this when gold was running between $200 and $400 an ounce- NANESB!]

A luxury hotel in the United Arab Emirates has made available to its guests an ATM Machine that dispenses gold bars and customized gold coins. The machine, designed by German businessman Thomas Geissler, contains an internal computer that updates gold prices every 10 minutes while the exterior actually has a thin plating of gold. Geissler had decided to debut the machine in the United Arab Emirates because of the increasing demand for gold in the region.

Customers and guests at Abu Dhabi's Emirates Palace hotel can purchase coins or 10g bars (some with the Hotel's logo etched on them) by inserting drachma- the local currency- into the machine and choosing from a number of items on a touchscreen menu.

Geissler said that his Gold to Go company is close to completing a machine that would be able to accept credit cards as well. After debuting the golden ATM in the Emirates, Gold to Go installed at least a half dozen more machines in Germany as well as one each in Italy and Spain.

There are also plans to install gold ATMs in the USA at locations in Las Vegas and Florida, although Geissler hasn't disclosed the exact location yet.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Mail Bomb Sweep Halts Air Frieght Shipments From Yemen

Reports are circulating that authorities in the Arabian peninsula were tipped off to last week's parcel/airfreight bomb plot by a former Guantanamo Bay detainee and Al Qaeda member who wanted safe passage home from Yemen.

Both explosive devices, one discovered in Dubai and the other in the UK, were concealed in printer cartridges and contained the plastic explosive PETN- the same materiel the Christmas Day 'underwear bomber' attempted to unsuccessfully detonate on board a Northwest Airlines flight over Detroit late last year. The devices were wired to cell phones, timers and power supplies and were likely powerful enough to bring down the airliners carrying them and were in boxes addressed to Chicago, IL-area synagogues. It was unclear if the bombs were supposed to be detonated on board the aircraft or when they arrived on their destination.

Authorities in Yemen detained and released a 22 year old college student suspected of mailing the bombs when they concluded her identity was used by another individual on invoices recovered at the San'a Fed Ex office. They are also looking into two language schools in San'a that the suspected masterminds might have been associated with.

An official with Qatar Airways said that at least one of the explovisve-laden parcels arrived from the Yemeni capital to the airline's Doha, Qatar hub on a passenger flight before it was discovered in the United Arab Emirates.



Investigators in the UAE are also trying to trace the serial numbers on the phone and printer cartridges. The airflight plot was discovered nearly two months after the crash of a UPS cargo plane on approach to Dubai International Airport that killed the plane's two crew members. Officials from the UAE's General Civil Authority concluded that a fire in the cargo hold filled the cockpit with smoke that likely caused the September crash, although they don't belive it was a bomb that downed the cargo plane. The ill-fated UPS flight was carrying a large quantity of Lithium batteries, which may not have started the fire, but could explode if the fire had spread to them.

Meanwhile, Canada, the UK and Germany have halted airfrieght shipments from Yemen.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Explosives Bound for USA Discovered on Cargo Flights

Suspicious parcels discovered in airfreight shipments by authorities in the UK and United Arab Emirates prompted a terror alert in which UPS planes were grounded in Newark and Philadelphia.

Federal investigators were inspecting the contents of the grounded planes at Newark's Liberty airport and Philadelphia International based on concerns over a terrorist threat originating from Yemen.
The Yemen-based Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is suspected, and investigators are looking into whether the packages were part of a dry run for a future mail-bomb plot. A UAE official told the Associated Press late Friday that an "explosive device" in Dubai was found in a courier company's regional hub.

FedEx reported earlier that a suspicious package was found at its Dubai facility.

Another package, found on a UPS plane at East Midlands Airport in central England, contained what looked like a toner cartridge with white powder and wires coming out of it.

The Thursday night discoveries prompted U.S. authorities on Friday to sweep a UPS plane in Newark, N.J., two UPS planes in Philadelphia and two UPS trucks in New York City.

The planes in Philadelphia are still being investigated. The Newark flight and New York trucks have been cleared [snip].

Given the origin of the packages, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula "is at the top of the list" of suspects, a U.S. official told Fox News.

"Since two of the suspicious packages that were intercepted were addressed to religious institutions in Chicago, all churches, synagogues and mosques in the Chicago area should be vigilant for any unsolicited or unexpected packages, especially those originating from overseas locations," Chicago FBI spokesman Ross Rice said.

Federal law enforcement officials said the suspicious device that resembled a toner cartridge was removed from the a flight in a distribution center at East Midlands Airport in the U.K.

A crew member aboard a UPS plane arriving to Philadelphia from Paris later notified authorities on approach about a suspicious package. The crew member described a possible radiological component to the package, the incident report said. The two occupants safely exited the aircraft after landing in a remote area of the airport.

A second UPS plane was isolated near the UPS terminal at the Philadelphia airport before take off, the report said.

A third UPS plane, which arrived at Newark Liberty Airport from East Midlands in the U.K., was investigated, but UPS says it was cleared and proceeded on to Louisville, KY.

Two UPS trucks in Brooklyn and Queens, N.Y., were also investigated and cleared, officials said.

Law enforcement officials also are investigating a suspicious packages in Portland, Maine. No word on whether that package has any links to UPS or Yemen.

"As an additional safety measure, FedEx embargoed all shipments originating from Yemen," Maury Lane, spokesman for FedEx told Reuters.