US 'voiced fears about India's bio-weapons security'

US officials fear terrorists could take advantage of lax security at Indian laboratories to launch attacks with biological weapons, according to comments in a leaked diplomatic cable.

US 'voiced fears about India's bio-weapons security'

US officials fear terrorists could take advantage of lax security at Indian laboratories to launch attacks with biological weapons, according to comments in a leaked diplomatic cable.

The cable was one of many documents sent from the US Embassy in New Delhi obtained by the website WikiLeaks and published today.

The cables dealt with accusations of Indian torture in Kashmir and the concerns of Rahul Gandhi - seen as India's prime-minister-in-waiting - that Hindu extremists posed a greater danger to India than Islamist militants.

One of the cables from June 2006 raised concerns that terrorist groups could bypass weak security at Indian laboratories to steal "bacteria, parasites, viruses or toxins".

"Getting into a facility to obtain lethal bio-agents is not very difficult here," one expert, whose name was redacted from the cable, told US diplomats.

A second expert said that academic research facilities maintain only very loose security procedures. "The harsh reality is that you can bribe a guard with a pack of cigarettes to get inside," the expert was quoted as saying.

One source told the diplomats that India's thousands of biological scientists also might be recruited, either out of ideological sympathies or for money.

An Indian government official dismissed the concerns as "far-fetched and fanciful".

However, Suman Sahai, a biotechnology expert, said security remains very poor at biotech firms four years after the cable was written.

The regulatory system is porous, employees are easily influenced and those leaving public laboratories to work for private companies often steal seeds, genetic material and other sensitive property before they head out the door for their new jobs, she said.

While India has not been the target of a biological attack, it has suffered devastating conventional terror strikes, including a 2001 attack on its parliament and the 2008 attack by 10 Pakistan-based militants who laid siege to the city of Mumbai for 60 hours.

Indian officials made it clear that they were focusing more on a possible nuclear or chemical attack - presumably from long-time rival Pakistan - than a biological one, which they considered unlikely to happen, the cable read.

Another cable detailed a confidential 2005 briefing by the International Committee of the Red Cross that accused India of the widespread use of torture in Kashmir, where the Indian government confronts a separatist insurgency.

The Red Cross said it had interviewed 1,491 detainees in Kashmir between 2002 and 2004 and found that many had been beaten, hung from the ceiling, put in stress positions, sexually abused or tortured with electricity, water or a round metal object called "the roller" used to crush a person's thighs, the cable said

The Red Cross had raised the issues with India for a decade and the continuation of the practice led the agency to believe the government condoned the torture, it said.

In response to the accusation, Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said today: "India is an open and democratic nation which adheres to the rule of law. If and when an aberration occurs, it is promptly and firmly dealt with under existing legal mechanisms in an effective and transparent manner."

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