Police appeal for bus clues in London bombings
Posted on: Thursday, 14 July 2005, 10:31 CDT
By Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) - Police released pictures of a young British Muslim who carried the fourth of last week's bombs aboard a London bus and appealed to the public on Thursday for information about his final movements.
The suspect, named as Hasib Hussain, was one of four men captured on security cameras just before 8:30 a.m. last Thursday at King's Cross station, about half an hour before three bombs exploded simultaneously aboard London underground trains.
The four were carrying rucksacks containing the bombs with which they blew themselves up in Britain's first suicide attacks, blamed by the government on al Qaeda-style Islamist militants.
A key puzzle in the investigation is why Hussain, unlike the others, carried his bomb onto a bus, where it exploded nearly an hour after the three initial blasts.
"The question I'm asking the public is: did you see this man at King's Cross?" said Peter Clarke, head of the Metropolitan Police anti-terrorism branch.
"Was he alone or with others? Do you know the route he took from the station? Did you see him get onto a number 30 bus? And if you did, where and when was that?"
Hussain, 18, was one of three suspects previously identified as young British Muslims of Pakistani origin from Yorkshire in northern England.
CRICKETER AND TEACHER
The other two were a university-educated cricket enthusiast and a married man with a baby daughter who worked in primary schools, helping children with learning difficulties.
Police sources said on Thursday the fourth suspected bomber was a Jamaican-born Briton.
Pakistan said it would fully assist Britain's investigation into the bombings but was awaiting details of trips the suspects had made to the country. Family members have said one of them briefly attended a religious school in Pakistan.
"We have an ongoing cooperation with Britain to fight international terrorism," said Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Jalil Abbas Jilani.
Clarke said the investigation was still in its early stages and that new leads were emerging by the hour.
Police searches were continuing in Yorkshire and at Aylesbury, 40 miles northwest of London.
Scotland Yard police chief Sir Ian Blair told reporters: "As far as we are concerned, we are as certain as we can be that four people were killed and they were the four people carrying the bombs."
He drew parallels between the mode of the attacks and last year's train bombings that killed 191 people in Madrid.
TRAINING AND FINANCE
"Al Qaeda clearly has the ability to provide training, to provide briefing and to provide expertise, and that is what occurred here and what occurred in Madrid," Blair said.
"We have to find who planned it, where did the finances come from, where have the explosives gone?"
Earlier, millions across Europe paid silent tribute on Thursday to the 53 victims of the morning rush-hour attacks one week ago.
Workers in London poured out of their offices to line the streets in memory of the dead. Taxis and buses pulled over and in Trafalgar Square traffic came to a complete standstill as thousands of people gathered in the hot sun for two minutes' quiet reflection.
"One City, One World," read a banner in the square, scene of joyous celebrations just a day before the bombings when London won the right to host the 2012 Olympics.
"I just lost one of my best mates -- but two minutes ain't going to bring him back," said Declan O'Hora, 22, contemplating the death of his childhood friend Ciaran Cassidy at King's Cross station.
Prime Minister Tony Blair, who on Wednesday said he would look urgently at new measures to tackle extremism, marked the silence in the garden of his Downing Street office, while Queen Elizabeth observed it at Buckingham Palace.
Golfers at the 134th British Open championship stood quietly on the fairways and greens of the St Andrews course in Scotland.
Tributes were also paid in Madrid and Bali -- both targeted by bombers from the Islamist al Qaeda network in the past -- and in cities across Europe.
Source: REUTERS
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