The Post

Police arrest terror suspects

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BRITAIN: Police have arrested two men in what they said was a ‘‘very significan­t’’ step in the hunt for whoever planted a bomb on a London commuter train that injured 30 people a day earlier.

Prime Minister Theresa May put Britain on the highest security level of ‘‘critical’’ late on Saturday, meaning another attack may be imminent, and deployed soldiers and armed police to strategic locations such as nuclear power plants.

Yesterday, officers in Dover, a ferry port on the southeast coast from which passenger ships sail to France, arrested a man and then partially evacuated the area, recovering a number of items, the police said without elaboratin­g.

Hours later, police raided a house in a commuter town southwest of London, and evacuated nearby premises as a precaution. Police officers in forensic suits were seen entering a modest house in a suburban street in Sunbury, around 20km from Parsons Green where the bomb exploded.

Later yesterday a second man was arrested.The 21-year-old man was arrested in the west London suburb of Hounslow just before midnight on Saturday local time, the Metropolit­an Police force said in a statement.

He was detained under Britain’s Terrorism Act and taken to a south London police station, the force added.

Officials said the attack could have been deadly. The home-made bomb shot flames through a packed train carriage but apparently failed to detonate fully.

According to media reports, the device was attached to a timer, unlike other recent blasts which have typically been suicide bombs.

Pictures showed a slightly charred white plastic bucket with wires coming out of the top in a supermarke­t shopping bag on the floor of a train carriage.

‘‘This is a very significan­t arrest,’’ said interior minister Amber Rudd of the 18-year-old. ‘‘The police have made very good progress but the operation is ongoing,’’ she said.

‘‘There is no doubt that this was a serious IED (improvised explosive device) and it was good fortune that it did so little damage.’’

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity.

The group has claimed other attacks in Britain this year, including two in London and one at a concert by American singer Ariana Grande in Manchester, but intelligen­ce officials say there is scant evidence that it had orchestrat­ed them.

Armed police patrolled the streets of London near government department­s in Westminste­r and guarded Premier League soccer grounds hosting matches, including the national stadium at Wembley.

Cressida Dick, Britain’s top police officer, sought to reassure the public as she joined colleagues patrolling the entertainm­ent district on the south bank of the

Thames.

‘‘Yesterday we saw a cowardly and indiscrimi­nate attack which could have resulted in many lives being lost,’’ she said. ‘‘London has not stopped after other terrible attacks and it will not stop after this one.’’

The last time Britain was put on ‘‘critical’’ alert was after a suicide bomber killed 22 people at the Ariana Grande concert in May.

The threat level remained at the highest setting for four days while police raced to establish if the man had worked alone or with the help of others. Prior to that it had not been triggered since 2007.

May said the public should not be alarmed by armed officers on the streets, a rare sight in Britain. ‘‘This is a proportion­ate and sensible step which will provide extra reassuranc­e and protection while the investigat­ion progresses,’’ she said in a televised statement.

The bomb struck as passengers were travelling to the centre of the British capital.

Some suffered burns and others were injured in a stampede to escape from the station, one of the above-ground stops on the Undergroun­d network.

Health officials said none was thought to be in a serious condition. ‘‘I was on the second carriage from the back. I just heard a kind of ‘whoosh’. I looked up and saw the whole carriage engulfed in flames making its way towards me,’’ Ola Fayankinnu said. ‘‘There were phones, hats, bags all over the place and when I looked back I saw a bag with flames.’’

 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? Cressida Dick, the Metropolit­an Police Commission­er walks along the Southbank in London, in a bid to offer the public reassuranc­e.
PHOTOS: REUTERS Cressida Dick, the Metropolit­an Police Commission­er walks along the Southbank in London, in a bid to offer the public reassuranc­e.
 ??  ?? Police officers stand behind cordon tape near a property in Sunbury-on-Thames that was searched after an explosion on a London Undergroun­d train.
Police officers stand behind cordon tape near a property in Sunbury-on-Thames that was searched after an explosion on a London Undergroun­d train.

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