World Watch
May 10, 2010 2:53 PM

Air Passenger's Massage Shoes Mistaken For Bomb

By
Farhan Bokhari
Topics
Pakistan

(Credit: Good Vibrations)
Was it a terrorist intent on destroying an airplane? Or was it a passenger armed only with battery-powered "massage shoes" to comfort aching feet, who found himself cooling his heels in jail?

On Tuesday, amused airport security officials in the southwestern Pakistani city of Karachi played down a major terrorism alert from the previous evening, when the arrest of a passenger prompted warnings that the country's first "shoe bomber" was in custody.

"It was all just a hype," a Karachi-based Pakistani intelligence official told CBS News on condition of anonymity. He explained that the passenger had shoes designed to massage one's feet. "There are wires and battery cells inside, connected to strips meant to massage," the official said.

"These days, everyone is very nervous. This arrest immediately prompted a scare. No explosives were found but the story about the massage shoes looks plausible," added the official, who said they had never seen such a thing before.

Around the world, security at airports was tightened to include shoe searches after Richard Reid, a British Islamist militant, tried to blow up an airliner over the Atlantic in 2001 using explosives hidden in his shoes.

The "Shoe Bomber" case unleashed a number of high profile and embarrassing events where even top national leaders have not been spared from having to take off their shoes during security screenings.

The passenger, Faiz Mohammad, was arrested in Karachi on Monday before he could board a Thai Airways flight to Muscat, the capital of the Persian Gulf sultanate of Oman. He told investigators that he had bought his shoes at a store in Karachi and wore them to comfort his feet during the hour-long flight.

On Tuesday, a team of Pakistani police and intelligence officials visited the store in Karachi's Saddar shopping district to verify the claim.

"We are trying to establish if there are other shoes like Faiz Mohammad's shoes to verify his story," said a Karachi police officer who also spoke to CBS News on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to journalists.

He declined to say if the police had, in fact, found similar pairs of shoes. But media reports described them as the Good Vibrations Therapeutic Vibrating Shoes ?, which sport two-tone colors, and come with a battery recharger and handy on-off switch.

Though Pakistani officials were eventually treating the case as a harmless event with little apparent relevance to global terrorism, the case comes during a week of heightened alert following the failed attempt to bomb New York's Times Square on May 1.

The arrest of Faisal Shahzad, the U.S. national of Pakistani origin, in connection with the failed attempt in New York has renewed anxieties over Pakistan's links to global terrorism.

American investigators interrogating Shahzad are believed to have established his contacts with Taliban militants from Pakistan's region along the Afghan border, in yet another reminder of the threat to Western countries that emanates directly from Islamic militants operating in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

By CBS News' Farhan Bokhari reporting from Islamabad


Add a Comment
by ToolMangler1 May 10, 2010 10:54 PM EDT
If they don't ban them on airplanes, some terrorist will give it a try for real...

I guarantee it!!!
Reply to this comment
by rwsmith29456 May 10, 2010 9:54 PM EDT
Did he think batteries and electrical works in a shoe would NOT attract attention? Guess he wanted his 15 minutes of fame.
Reply to this comment
by pragmatist1 May 10, 2010 9:06 PM EDT
How stupid are some people anyway? Did they really think something like this wouldn't generate suspicion?
Reply to this comment
by wtcmedicdidntforget May 10, 2010 8:15 PM EDT
They should have done an internal search also. anyone stupid enough to wear something like this should get the darwin award.
Reply to this comment
by thesevenveils May 10, 2010 5:52 PM EDT
Ha! The shoe bomb has an off/on switch.
Reply to this comment
by barbaram99 May 10, 2010 4:08 PM EDT
alot of us have feet that hurt..Yet never heard of that kind of footwear.
Reply to this comment
by rickwar May 10, 2010 3:48 PM EDT
In other news a gentlemans member was grabbed by security, "We thought it was a stick of TNT"
Reply to this comment
by junebug1965 May 10, 2010 3:33 PM EDT
Hmm. Wonder if they really work.

http://***********/ye8bt7o
Reply to this comment
by junebug1965 May 10, 2010 3:39 PM EDT
You'll have to copy/paste, sorry.
.

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