Daily Mirror

PREM STARS ON EASTER BOMB ALERT

Football clubs tighten security after attack in Germany

- BY JEREMY ARMSTRONG

SECURITY for this weekend’s Premier League games is set to be at an all-time high.

One expert said the Dortmund team bus terror attack shows “nowhere is completely safe for players, fans or staff ”. Man United play tonight in the ISIS-hit city of Brussels.

PREMIER League clubs will be given fresh advice on how to keep players safe in the wake of the bus bomb attack in Dortmund, insiders have said.

It could include changing the route teams usually take to get to games.

Security expert Will Geddes said: “This was an attack on football carried out in the heart of Europe... and will send alarm bells ringing throughout the English game and leagues around the world.

“At first I was sceptical about it being ISIS. I thought they would be more likely to strike inside or outside a stadium – like we saw in Paris.

“An attack on a multinatio­nal German club team on their way to a game comes as a real surprise, and really shows nowhere is completely safe for players, fans or staff.”

Mr Geddes, who runs the Internatio­nal Corporate Protection agency, said British clubs are working with experts to boost security at stadiums.

He added: “You can never say anywhere is 100% safe, but I can assure the fans they are doing all they can to get as close to that as possible.”

Clubs will be on the highest ever alert during the Easter weekend after the bus carrying Borussia Dortmund’s players to a Champions League match was hit by three bombs on Tuesday night.

A Premier League source told the Mirror: “Security is the responsibi­lity of each individual club and obviously it is difficult to give overall guidance on 20 different journeys. But the clubs will be speaking to each other and police forces across the country about security on bus journeys to and from the grounds. “It will be higher than ever for the first games after the attack.” The moves come as Manchester United prepare to take on Anderlecht tonight in Brussels where IS bombers killed 32 people and left more than 300 injured in attacks at the airport and a metro station last year. Dortmund defender Marc Bartra’s wrist was broken as glass and metal flew through the air when the bombs hidden in a hedge blew out the back window of the bus in Germany on Tuesday. The Spanish internatio­nal posted a photo

online with his right arm in a sling and his left thumb up, telling fans: “As you can see I am doing much better.”

The explosives contained metal strips with a range of about 100 metres.

Police arrested a suspect with “Islamist links” yesterday.

Officers said the bombing was being treated as a “targeted terror attack”.

Lead prosecutor Frauke Koehler said: “Two suspects from the Islamist spectrum are the focus of our investigat­ion. Their flats were searched. One of the two has been detained.”

Ms Koehler said three letters containing the same text found near the site of the blasts indicated the attackers had links to Islamic State. The letters made reference to German planes “murdering Muslims” caliphatei­n the of IS. selfdeclar­ed Chancellor Angela Merkel called the bombing a “revolting act”. There was a huge security operation – with the military and armed police in and around the Westfalen stadium – as Dortmund’s quarter final match against Monaco finally went ahead after it had to be cancelled on Tuesday. The team bus had a police escort and defiant Dortmund fans waved scarves emblazoned­walk alone”. with “You’ll never Former Met police officer Chris Cully, of security company Dilitas, warned that terrorists will seek to emulate the bus bombing, saying: “Copycat attacks will always be the big worry. “Terrorists see it and think, ‘I wish we had thought of that’. This is high profile, on easy targets. The more publicity, the more terror they bring.”

Last night the Premier League said: “Our clubs take safety and security very seriously and have a range of provisions in place. They routinely work closely with the police, and with their local safety advisory group.”

Meanwhile, police launched a baton attack in Madrid, making eight arrests, after Leicester City fans chanted “Spanish b ***** ds, Gibraltar’s ours”.

Police said “hooligans” were detained for public disorder and vandalism before the match against Atlético Madrid.

Former Leicester player Gary Lineker said footage showed fans “behaving despicably”.

Romanian tourist Andreea Cristea, 31, died of multiple organ failure after being rammed into the Thames during the Westminste­r terror attack, an inquest has been told.

 ??  ?? BOMB Dortmund bus
BOMB Dortmund bus
 ??  ?? RECOVERING Marc Bartra in cast
RECOVERING Marc Bartra in cast
 ??  ?? SUPERSTAR Man United’s Ibrahimovi­c
SUPERSTAR Man United’s Ibrahimovi­c
 ??  ?? ARMED POLICE Officers in Dortmund last night
ARMED POLICE Officers in Dortmund last night
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

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