The Borneo Post

Manchester terror attack probe widens

Britain races to trace jihadist network suspected of orchestrat­ing Monday attack that killed 22 people

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MANCHESTER, United Kingdom: Britain raced to hunt down a jihadist network thought to be behind the Manchester concert attack, as a row escalated between London and Washington over leaked material from the probe.

As more children were named among the 22 victims of Monday’s massacre, Libyan authoritie­s detained the suicide bomber’s father as well as his brother and police in Britain also carried out new arrests and raids.

A grieving country ground to a halt for a minute’s silence at 11.00am local time (1000 GMT) to remember the dead, innocent victims of the latest Islamic State-claimed atrocity to hit Europe.

Carmel McLaughlan, 69, came to St Ann’s Square in Manchester for the minute’s silence.

Speaking to AFP as she stood next to the flowers. “I just feel as though it’s a bereavemen­t for all of us. It’s like your own family just passed away, it’s just so, so sad, there’s just sadness hanging over Manchester at the moment. It’s terrible, it’s hard to believe it.”

In Manchester, northwest England, feelings were still raw following Salman Abedi’s attack on a concert by US pop star Ariana Grande – especially so as the bomber was born in the city.

But Manchester United fans stood together in defiant mood as their team’s triumph in European football’s Europa League final brought some much- needed smiles to a city still in pain.

The club dedicated their trophy to those killed, while manager Jose Mourinho said they would gladly exchange it if it could bring their lives back.

But amid the grief, British authoritie­s were left “furious” by repeated leaks of material shared with their US counterpar­ts, providing an awkward backdrop for Prime Minister Theresa May’s meeting with US President Donald Trump at the Nato summit in Brussels later Thursday.

Images obtained by The New York Times newspaper showed a detonator Abedi was said to have carried in his left hand, shrapnel including nuts and screws and the shredded remains of a blue backpack.

“We are furious. This is completely unacceptab­le,” a government ministry source said of the images “leaked from inside the US system”.

The leak, which followed a similar leak of the bomber’s identity and probe details, has rocked the intelligen­ce- sharing relationsh­ip between close allies London and Washington.

We are furious. This is completely unacceptab­le.

Britain government ministry source

The National Counter Terrorism Policing body said the breach of trust caused great “damage” and “undermines our investigat­ions.”

University dropout Abedi, 22, grew up in a Libyan family that reportedly f led to Manchester to escape the now- fallen regime of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

His father Ramadan and younger brother Hashem were detained in Libya, authoritie­s there said.

A spokesman for the Deterrence Force, which acts as Libya’s Government of National Accord’s police, said the brother was aware of Abedi’s plan and the siblings were both members of the Islamic State jihadist group.

The attack was the latest in a series of deadly incidents across Europe claimed by IS that have coincided with an offensive on the group in Syria and Iraq carried out by US, British and other Western forces.

Hashem had been “under surveillan­ce for a month and a half” and “investigat­ion teams supplied intelligen­ce that he was planning a terrorist attack in the capital Tripoli”, the Deterrence Force said on its Facebook page.

A relative told AFP that Abedi had travelled to Manchester from Libya four days before the bombing.

British officials said Abedi had been on the radar of the intelligen­ce community before the massacre.

“It’s very clear that this is a network that we are investigat­ing,” Manchester police chief Ian Hopkins told reporters.

Police announced two new arrests Thursday in their probe, bringing the total to eight people in custody in Britain. A woman detained on Wednesday was released without charges.

Early Thursday, police said they conducted a controlled explosion in the south of Manchester where they were carrying out searches in the Moss Side area connected to the attack.

Elders at the south Manchester mosque believed to have been frequented by Abedi insisted that his actions were wholly alien to their preaching, and pointed the finger at online radicalisa­tion.

“This act of cowardice has no place in our religion,” said Fawzi Haffar, a trustee at the Didsbury mosque.

French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said Abedi had “likely” been to Syria after the trip to Libya, citing informatio­n provided by British intelligen­ce services to their counterpar­ts in Paris.

“In any case, the links with Daesh are proven,” he said, using a term for IS.

Britain’s terror threat assessment has been hiked to ‘critical’, the highest level, meaning an attack is considered imminent.

Armed troops were sent to guard key sites, a rare sight in mainland Britain.

The attack was the deadliest in Britain since 2005 when four Islamist suicide bombers attacked London’s transport system, killing 52 people. May was to hold a meeting of Britain’s emergency committee on Thursday before heading to Brussels.

After the Nato summit, May is heading to the G7 gathering in Italy on Friday. However, she will curtail her trip, returning home late Friday, missing the Saturday talks in Sicily.

The bombing came just over two weeks before a snap general election set for June 8. Campaignin­g will resume on Friday.

A total of 64 people are being treated in hospital, including 20 in critical care, medical officials said. Twelve of the injured are aged under 16. One of those killed was an eight-year-old girl.

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 ??  ?? Messages and floral tributes left for the victims of the attack on Manchester Arena lie around the statue in St Ann’s Square in central Manchester. — Reuters photo
Messages and floral tributes left for the victims of the attack on Manchester Arena lie around the statue in St Ann’s Square in central Manchester. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? This photo obtained courtesy of The New York Times from British Law Enforcemen­t, shows what the bomber in the Manchester terrorist attack appeared to have carried as a powerful explosive in a lightweigh­t metal container concealed within a blue Karrimor...
This photo obtained courtesy of The New York Times from British Law Enforcemen­t, shows what the bomber in the Manchester terrorist attack appeared to have carried as a powerful explosive in a lightweigh­t metal container concealed within a blue Karrimor...
 ??  ?? This photo obtained courtesy of The New York Times from British Law Enforcemen­t, shows what the bomber in the Manchester terrorist attack appeared to have use to detonate a powerful explosive, according to preliminar­y informatio­n gathered by British...
This photo obtained courtesy of The New York Times from British Law Enforcemen­t, shows what the bomber in the Manchester terrorist attack appeared to have use to detonate a powerful explosive, according to preliminar­y informatio­n gathered by British...
 ??  ?? Hashem Abedi
Hashem Abedi
 ??  ?? Ramadan Abedi
Ramadan Abedi

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