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Last updated on February 12, 2012 at 11:46 EST

UK bomb police search houses in Northern England

July 12, 2005

By Yara Bayoumy

LEEDS, England (Reuters) – British police raided five homes
and surrounded another in the northern city of Leeds on Tuesday
in the hunt for suspected al Qaeda bombers who killed at least
52 people in London attacks last week.

They were the first reported swoops since last Thursday’s
explosions and came as frustration mounted at what many
grieving relatives feel is slow progress in formally
identifying the victims.

Detectives called the house searches “significant” but
there was no word of any arrests. Armed officers then
surrounded another house amid media reports there had also been
a controlled explosion in the area.

Leeds has one of the biggest Muslim populations in Britain.

In May 2001, it was one of a series of northern towns which
saw rioting between Asian and white youths blamed on ethnic,
religious and racial divisions.

In Brussels on Tuesday, finance minister Gordon Brown
pressed the European Union to speed up a raft of measures aimed
at cutting off terrorism funding.

In the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on U.S. cities
and the March, 2004 Madrid train bombings, the 25-nation bloc
agreed to tighten controls on money transfers and seizing the
assets of suspects. Brown wants them to move faster.

But top EU Commission official Fabio Colasanti said a
proposal from Britain, Ireland, France and Sweden to log all
phone and Internet usage for long periods to help combat
terrorism is unrealistic.

ANGRY RELATIVES

British Defense Secretary John Reid appealed to anxious
relatives for more time. “It is better to get this right than
to get it rushed,” he said.

Five days after London’s worst peacetime bomb attack,
Emmanuel Wundowa angrily complained that he first found out on
television that his wife Gladys had been identified as a
victim.

“Nobody is telling me anything,” he said. “If they have got
some information that is of benefit to me, why don’t they pass
it on to me?”

The names of two more victims were released by police on
Tuesday. Scotland Yard said financial workers Jamie Gordon, 30,
and Philip Stuart Russell, 28, died in the blasts.

After a wave of public scorn and indignation, the U.S. Air
Force rescinded an order banning its personnel at two air bases
in Britain from visiting London in the wake of the bombings.

London police chief Ian Blair had urged the Americans to
reverse their decision as British authorities had been urging
people to return to work and normality after the attacks on
three underground trains and a bus.

Blair said London, as well as New York, continued to be
“major terrorist targets.”

“Another attack is likely, there’s no question about that.
When, who knows?” he told BBC Radio.

Hundreds of extra officers have been drafted in to help in
the inquiry. They are examining footage from 2,500 closed
circuit television cameras around the capital and assessing
information given by around 2,000 callers.

A senior police source told the Times newspaper that two
bodies at the scene of the bus bombing had to be examined in
close detail because they appeared to be holding the bomb or
sitting on top of it.

“One of those might be the bomber,” the source was quoted
as saying.


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