All passports that get stolen get sold… and the British one is a strong passport’:
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All passports that get stolen get sold… and the British one is a strong passport’: The Mail buys a UK passport for £2,500 from people smuggler dubbed ‘The Doctor’
A disturbing trade in stolen British passports is exposed today by the Daily Mail.
Swiped by criminal gangs in Western Europe, they are flown to Istanbul or Athens for sale by people smugglers.
Security experts said owning a genuine British passport was like ‘winning the lottery’ for jihadis and criminals – allowing them to slip across borders undetected.
In response to the Mail’s findings, MPs called for action to address Britain’s ‘shocking vulnerability’ to potentially dangerous illegals.
Our investigation reveals that British citizens are selling their passports to be bought by migrants of similar appearance.
And fake EU identity cards that can be used to enter the UK are also being made to order within three days in the Balkans.
The Mail bought a UK passport for £2,500 from Abu Ahmad, a people-smuggling kingpin in Turkey. It had been stolen from a Milton Keynes man working in Brussels.
It was one of five passports that Ahmad, who is known as ‘The Doctor’, offered to the Mail.
The others included one stolen from an Oxford graduate visiting Paris and another taken from a 28-year-old Manchester woman who was on holiday in Spain.
Ahmad boasted that seven in ten of his clients succeed in duping immigration staff and making it to the UK.
He is on bail while he appeals against an eight-year sentence for spiriting thousands of migrants into Europe, including suspected jihadis. At its peak, his ‘business’ was bringing in £110,000 a month.
Europol, an EU police agency, warned yesterday that people smugglers operating in Turkey and Greece were ‘frequent’ offenders in the trade in black market documents, which is an ‘important enabler’ of organised crime.
Ahmad said all the passports he sold were genuine – otherwise they would be no use at border control.
They are either stolen or sold by their owners, who agree not to report them as missing for a few months, by which time they have been used by Ahmad’s customers.
He said: ‘Most British passports are stolen. Except if the passport was in the name of someone Arabic or Pakistani or something, that could have been sold.’
Ahmad said he had no qualms about profiting from stolen passports and, despite boasting he has smuggled thousands of people into Britain, insisted he was certain none of them were jihadis or criminals.
But another Syrian immigrant in Turkey told the Mail at least two people Ahmad helped get into Europe were known Islamists operating in Damascus.
The German authorities were alerted about them after their arrival, he said.
Interpol, an international police agency, has a stolen and lost travel documents database, known as SLTD, which it says was searched more than 1.2billion times in the first nine months of 2016, providing 115,000 ‘hits’.
But on its website, it admits: ‘Interpol is not automatically notified of all passport thefts occurring worldwide, and the SLTD database is not connected to national lists of stolen or lost passports.
‘Despite the potential availability of the SLTD database, not all countries systematically search the database to determine whether an individual is using a fraudulent passport.’
In 2014, the head of the agency said just four in ten passports used for international flights were checked against the database.
Labour MP John Woodcock, a member of the Commons home affairs committee, said: ‘At a time when several hundred potentially highly dangerous jihadis have fled when Islamic State has been deposed it’s highly alarming to learn that this way of entering the UK illegally seems to be so readily available.’
Ed Davey, the Lib Dem home affairs spokesman, said: ‘Criminals who capitalise on the vulnerability of tourists and then profit off refugees and immigrants in desperate need of help must not be allowed to operate so freely.’
David Lowe, a former Special Branch counter-terrorism officer now based at Leeds Beckett University, said: ‘For terrorists and criminals getting a new passport is like winning the lottery.
‘It’s a significant concern with fighters coming from Islamic State or returning British fighters. Once you get in with somebody else’s passport you are very difficult to trace.’
Immigration minister Caroline Nokes said: ‘One hundred per cent of passports are inspected at the border.
‘Border Force officers are rigorously trained to prevent the holders of fraudulent documents from entering the country and between 2010 and March 2018, we denied entry to over 144,000 people.
‘Immigration Enforcement constantly monitors and identifies emerging threats in relation to the production and supply of false travel documents, including the use of the internet to facilitate the trade in passports and identity cards.
‘We have a range of interventions to target the criminals involved, including criminal prosecution of crime groups in the UK and overseas.’
Just 72 hours after putting out a request for a British passport we secured a meeting with a people smuggler who offered us five.
Abu Ahmad, who is known as ‘The Doctor’, used to operate openly among fellow Syrian migrants hoping to reach to Western Europe.
However, since being put on the Interpol wanted list, the former heart surgeon has gone to ground and regularly changes his phone and home to evade the attention of the authorities.
After negotiating with an intermediary, he agreed to meet us at our room at the Istanbul Grand Hyatt and tell his story.
He insisted his face should be disguised, and made it very clear our contact would suffer if the deal was broken.
The stocky 40-year-old bristled when asked if he was worried that jihadis might be among the thousands of people he had helped smuggle into Europe.
And he pointedly asked the intermediary: ‘Are the people from your side solid or not?’
Relaxing a little, he showed us the passport he was selling and explained: ‘I got hold of this through people who bring us European passports – legitimate ones that haven’t been toyed with. Most of them come from Greece.’
He said he normally chooses around 15 from a range of 100 passports, selecting those that most look like his clients.