Police believe all London bombers caught-source
By Michael Holden and Phil Stewart
LONDON/ROME (Reuters) – Police believe they have caught
four men suspected of trying to explode bombs on London’s
transport system last week after armed raids on Friday in the
British capital and an arrest in Rome, a police source said.
“My belief is we have all four people we are seeking in
custody,” the source told Reuters.
Police would not confirm that Britain’s biggest manhunt was
over and repeated warnings that further attacks were possible
after a day of fast-moving developments.
The abortive attacks took place on July 21, exactly two
weeks after four British Muslims killed themselves and 52
people in blasts on three underground trains and a bus in
London.
Anti-terrorist police chief Peter Clarke said two men
arrested in London had identified themselves as Ibrahim Muktar
Said and Ramzi Mohammed and named a third man arrested in Rome
as Hussain Osman. Another man was arrested in London.
“The investigation has moved with some speed, but I must
emphasize it is still continuing,” Clarke told reporters.
Police had been hunting for a 27-year-old man named as
Muktar Said-Ibrahim who they suspect tried to set off a device
on a Number 26 bus on July 21.
Police arrested Yasin Hassan Omar, suspected of trying to
explode a bomb on the underground, on Wednesday.
As the hunt for the suspected Islamist militants gathered
pace, armed police surrounded an apartment in west London and a
tense siege unfolded in front of neighbors, including Josephine
Knight, 55, who followed events through her binoculars.
“They blew the door off with plastic explosives, then threw
in canisters of tear gas,” she told Reuters.
“About half a dozen officers moved along the balcony and
peppered shots into the kitchen window.”
WEST LONDON SIEGE
Police in black flak jackets and gas masks rushed into the
housing estate in the Ladbroke Grove area, a few hundred meters
(yards) from where a fifth bomb was found abandoned in bushes
two days after the failed attacks.
The police had shouted: “Come out Mohammed. Take your
underwear off,” Knight said.
A witness, who declined to give her name, said the police
had told the suspect they needed to make sure he was not
carrying explosives.
Another reported hearing up to six explosions and said
police had told him they were caused by stun grenades.
A second raid took place in the nearby Notting Hill area.
Witnesses saw one man handcuffed and held between two police
officers as he was bundled into a van and taken away.
Italian Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu identified the
man arrested in Rome as Osman Hussain, a naturalized Briton of
Somali origin who left London for continental Europe after the
failed attacks.
Italian police said Hussain had traveled by train from
London to Paris to Milan, and then on to Rome where he was
arrested on Friday afternoon at a relative’s apartment in the
southeastern Casilino neighborhood.
Also in London on Friday, police arrested two women under
anti-terrorism legislation at Liverpool Street station in the
heart of the city and closed the complex.
The station was cordoned off while police investigated a
suspect package. It was later reopened. (additional reporting
by Katherine Baldwin, Paul Majendie, Kate Holton and Mike
Peacock)
