Swiss institute brands latest bin Laden tape a fake

Ricardo MadGello madgello at hotmail.com
Sat Feb 15 12:04:24 CET 2003


November 29 2002

Paris: The latest audiotape statement attributed to Osama bin Laden is not
authentic, according to a Swiss research institute.

The Lausanne-based Dalle Molle Institute for Perceptual Artificial
Intelligence, IDIAP, said it was 95 per cent certain the tape does not
feature bin Laden's voice.

The review of the tape was commissioned by France-2 television and its
findings were presented by the institute's director, Professor Herve
Bourlard, in a TV report.

Bourlard said the institute compared the voice on the tape, first aired two
weeks ago on Al-Jazeera, an Arabic television network, with some 20 earlier
recordings attributed to bin Laden.

Bourlard, a voice recognition expert, has worked extensively with the
International Computer Science Institute at Berkeley, California. He has
also worked as co-editor-in-chief of the Speech Communication journal with
ICSI director Nelson Morgan, and as an adviser to the European Commission.
He is the author or co-author of 150 research papers and two books.

On its Internet site, the IDIAP describes itself as a semiprivate research
institute affiliated with the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, a
highly respected organisation, and the University of Geneva. It carries out
research in the fields of speech and speaker recognition, computer vision
and machine learning.

Officials at the institute could not be reached for comment late today.

US experts have maintained the tape will likely never be fully authenticated
because its poor quality defies complete analysis by even the most
sophisticated voice print technology.

But US experts who have heard it generally support the conclusion by US law
enforcement officials that it probably is bin Laden speaking.

In the tape, the speaker refers to recent terrorist strikes US officials
believe are connected to bin Laden's al-Qaeda network. If fully verified, it
would provide the first evidence in a year that bin Laden survived US
bombing in Afghanistan.

AP

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/11/29/1038386299712.html





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