Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Army deployed at key sites in UK British home secy irritated at US for leaking details of attack suspect

Prime Minister Modi conveys condolence­s, suspect’s brother held in Libya

- Prasun Sonwalkar & agencies HT Correspond­ent

LONDON There were emotional scenes on Wednesday as people laid flowers, cards, lit candles and said silent prayers for the 22 killed in Monday’s terror attack in Manchester, and Britain saw the rare spectacle of the army being deployed in key places in London and elsewhere.

The army was deployed in Northern Ireland during the troubles, but rarely in mainland Britain. The deployment of 3,800 soldiers in places such as Buckingham Palace, Downing Street, foreign missions and Westminste­r indicated the level of threat assessed by security agencies.

As large vigils were held across the country, a Downing Street spokespers­on told Hindustan Times that Prime Minister Narendra Modi conveyed to Prime Minister Theresa May India’s deepest condolence­s, and said India’s prayers were with all of those affected.

“Prime Minister Modi congratula­ted the people of Manchester on their courage, patience and spirit. They agreed the UK and India would continue to cooperate closely on counterter­rorism, including aviation security and countering online radicalisa­tion,” the spokespers­on added.

The Greater Manchester Police said a “network” of accomplice­s was being investigat­ed as four people were arrested on Wednesday, bringing the total to five after one man was held on Tuesday. One of the arrested is suspected suicide bomber Salman Abedi’s older brother Ismael.

Abedi’s younger brother Hashem, who was arrested from the Libyan capital of Tripoli on Tuesday, confessed to have links with Islamic State, according to media reports.

The police also confirmed that one of the dead was a serving police officer who was off duty, and added that all the deceased had been identified. Counter-terrorism operations were described as “intense” and included a raid in a block of flats in Manchester on Wednesday.

A meeting of the government’s emergency committee (called “Cobra”) was held on Wednesday morning – the third in 24 hours – as home secretary Amber Rudd suggested Abedi may not have acted alone in the Manchester Arena attack. Tuesday evening’s meeting raised the terror threat level from “severe” to “critical”.

Officials tracing his life and recent activities suggested that Abedi, 22, of Libyan parentage, had recently returned from a visit to Libya. It was also likely that he was a “mule” for a bomb made by others who were still at large.

A BBC Radio station was briefly evacuated and a man with a knife was arrested near the Buckingham Palace as London saw heightened security, but the two incidents were said to be unrelated to the counter-terrorism investigat­ions.

Abedi’s Libya-based father reportedly said his son was not guilty, while the British-Libyan community in Manchester issues a statement: “This attack was an attack on all of us. Such depraved acts have no basis in Islam.”

“We support the police in bringing the perpetrato­rs to justice, and in protecting the people of Manchester and the rest of the UK. Many members of the community in Manchester are doctors who stand side by side with their colleagues to ensuring that victims and other patients receive the best possible care at this difficult time,” it added.

Local campaignin­g for the June 8 election, which was suspended, will resume on Thursday, reports said.

Senior Labour leader Yvette Cooper, who chaired the home affairs committee in the last parliament, said that all parties will want to support the police and security agencies. LONDON: Home secretary Amber Rudd expressed UK’s irritation over some US officials leaking the identity of Salman Abedi, the suspect in the Manchester attack, hours before the name was released by the police .

She said: “The British police have been very clear they want to control the flow of informatio­n in order to protect operationa­l integrity - the element of surprise - so it is irritating if it gets released from other sources, and I’ve been very clear with our friends that that should not happen again.”

Asked if she would be looking at how informatio­n sharing with the US may have resulted in the premature release of details that the British police and security services had not wanted in the public domain, Rudd said: “Yes, quite frankly.”

Pressedonw­hethertheA­mericans had compromise­d the probe, she said: “I wouldn’t go that far, but I can say they are perfectly clear about the situation and that it shouldn’t happen again.”

After a series of vigils in Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol and elsewhere on Tuesday, vigils were also being organised in Sheffield and other towns, as the UK comes to terms with what appears to be the first case of suicide bombing in the country. So far, names of 10 of the 22 victims have been released. The victims include a Polish couple who were at the venue to collect their daughter attending the concert.

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