The Sun (Malaysia)

Manchester attack survivors file case

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More than 250 survivors of the 2017 Manchester Arena attack have filed a lawsuit against Britain’s domestic intelligen­ce services, their lawyers said in a statement on Sunday.

In May 2017, 22 people were killed and another 100 injured when a bomber detonated his device at an Ariana Grande pop concert.

An official enquiry found in March 2023 that the attack might have been stopped if Britain’s MI5 security service had acted on vital intelligen­ce.

“Legal teams representi­ng injured survivors and families of the deceased from the Manchester Arena bombing in 2017 can confirm that they have collective­ly submitted a group claim on behalf of more than 250 clients to the Investigat­ory Powers Tribunal (IPT),” the three law firms involved in the lawsuit – Hudgell Solicitors, Slater & Gordon and Broudie Jackson Canter – said in a statement.

The lawyers said they could not give more details at this stage.

The suicide attack, as concert-goers were leaving the show at the Manchester Arena in northern England, was carried out by 22-yearold Salman Abedi, who was from Manchester but of Libyan descent.

Inspired by a radical group, he used a homemade shrapnel bomb to target crowds of mostly young people who had been attending the concert by the US pop star, as well as parents who had come to pick up their children.

The IPT is an independen­t body that investigat­es complaints from people who believe they have been a victim of unlawful action by a public authority using covert investigat­ive techniques and those targeting the intelligen­ce services.

Delays in relation to one of two pieces of intelligen­ce led to the “missing of an opportunit­y to take a potentiall­y important investigat­ive action”, said John Saunders, the chairman of the 2023 inquiry, in his report last year.

MI5 director-general Ken McCallum said at the time that he was “profoundly sorry that MI5 did not prevent the attack”. – AFP

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