The Daily Courier

Campaign resumes 4 days after blast

- By The Associated Press

LONDON — Four days after a suicide bombing plunged Britain into mourning, political campaignin­g for a general election in two weeks resumed Friday with the main opposition leader linking acts of terrorism at home to foreign wars like the one in Libya.

Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn risked being assailed for politicizi­ng the Manchester Arena attack that killed 22 people by claiming his party would change Britain’s foreign policy if it takes power after the June 8 vote by abandoning the “war on terror.”

“Many experts, including profession­als in our intelligen­ce and security services, have pointed to the connection­s between wars our government has supported or fought in other countries, such as Libya, and terrorism here at home,” Corbyn said in his first speech since Monday night’s attack.

National campaignin­g had been on hold to honour the victims.

Salman Abedi, the bomber who struck the Ariana Grande concert, had strong links to Libya. His parents were born and lived there before moving to Britain in the early 1990s. They eventually returned with several of their six children, and Abedi travelled there to visit his family on occasion.

Prime Minister Theresa May, who was attending a summit of the Group of Seven in Sicily, offered a blistering critique of Corbyn’s position when she was asked about it at a news conference.

May said that while she was at the summit rallying support for the fight against terrorism, “Jeremy Corbyn has said that terror attacks in Britain are our own fault, and he has said that just a few days after one of the worst terror attacks” in the country’s history.

“There can never, ever, be an excuse for terrorism,” she said, adding “the choice people face at the general election has become starker.”

While Corbyn could alienate some voters with his comments, he is trying to win back the many Labour supporters who turned away from the party in the aftermath of then Prime Minister Tony Blair’s decision to join the U.S.led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

The Labour Party under Corbyn has consistent­ly trailed May’s Conservati­ves in the polls, but has begun to make gains in the last week. It is unclear how the worst attack in Britain in more than a decade will impact voter sentiment.

Grande, meanwhile, said she would return to Manchester for a benefit concert to raise money for the victims and their families.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? People attend a service Friday at the Angel of the North in Gateshead, England, in memory of Manchester bombing victims Courtney Boyle and stepfather Philip Tron. Boyle, a 19-year-old student at Leeds Beckett University, and Tron, 32, were picking up...
The Associated Press People attend a service Friday at the Angel of the North in Gateshead, England, in memory of Manchester bombing victims Courtney Boyle and stepfather Philip Tron. Boyle, a 19-year-old student at Leeds Beckett University, and Tron, 32, were picking up...

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