The Citizen (KZN)

New York bomber fails

CITY ON HIGH ALERT AHEAD OF CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS Man detonated pipe bomb in a crowded subway, injuring himself and 3 others.

-

Aman carrying a pipe bomb strapped to his body detonated it in a crowded New York subway passageway during the morning rush hour yesterday, seriously injuring himself, but only lightly injuring three others.

New York mayor Bill de Blasio called the bombing an “attempted terrorist attack”, and identified the 27-year-old man as Akayed Ullah.

The blast took place at the height of the morning rush hour in the subway station at the New York Port Authority bus terminal, not far from the city’s iconic Times Square, sparking commuter panic and travel disruption­s.

Subway trains were bypassing the Port Authority and Times Square stations as the investigat­ion continued.

The bomber was in custody and sent to a hospital with burns and wounds on his body.

The explosion rattled a city still scarred by the devastatin­g September 11 attacks, and a truck attack on October 31 that left eight dead on a bike path.

“This is New York. The reality is that we are a target by many who would like to make a statement against democracy, against freedom,” New York governor Andrew Cuomo told reporters.

“This was an attempted terrorist attack,” mayor Bill de Blasio added. “Thank God the perpetrato­r did not achieve his ultimate goals.”

New York police commission­er James O'Neill said the 27-year-old suspect had strapped the explosive device, which resembled a crude pipe bomb, to his body. He suffered burns to the hands and abdomen, and other injuries.

Photos circulatin­g on social media showed the man on the ground with his hands cuffed behind his back and injuries to his torso.

Former New York police chief Bill Bratton told MSNBC television that he had been told the suspect was originally from Bangladesh and may have been acting in the name of the Islamic State group.

Police quickly evacuated the Port Authority station and closed roads in the area, which were filled with police cars and ambulances with flashing lights.

President Donald Trump was briefed on the explosion, White House spokespers­on Sarah Huckabee Sanders wrote on Twitter.

The city remains constantly on edge as a target of possible terror attacks, and is on high alert ahead of the holidays, which culminate every year with the giant New Year’s Eve celebratio­n in Times Square, attended by hundreds of thousands of revellers.

On October 31, Sayfullo Saipov, an immigrant from Uzbekistan, drove a rented truck down a busy bike and pedestrian path, killing eight people and injuring 12. It was the first deadly terror attack in New York since 9/11, though several plots since then have been disrupted.

Yesterday’s attack highlighte­d one of the city’s greatest vulnerabil­ities – its undergroun­d transit system.

A bomb in a subway station “is in many ways one of our worst nightmares,” Cuomo said. – AFP

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? NYPD SHIELD. Police officers stand on a closed West 42nd Street near the New York Port Authority bus terminal after reports of an explosion in New York City yesterday.
Picture: Reuters NYPD SHIELD. Police officers stand on a closed West 42nd Street near the New York Port Authority bus terminal after reports of an explosion in New York City yesterday.
 ?? Picture: AFP ?? SAFE. Police and other first responders respond to a reported explosion at the Port Authority Bus Terminal yesterday in New York.
Picture: AFP SAFE. Police and other first responders respond to a reported explosion at the Port Authority Bus Terminal yesterday in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa