The Denver Post

“Appalling”

SUICIDE BOMBER SUSPECTED AT ARIANA GRANDE SHOW

- By Griff Witte and Peter Holley

MANCHESTER CONCERT ATTACK KILLS AT LEAST 19

An explosion described by police as a likely terrorist attack ripped through a crowd of teenagers and other concertgoe­rs late Monday after a performanc­e by an American pop singer, leaving at least 19 people dead and about 60 injured.

Initial evidence at the scene suggested the attack may have been a suicide bombing, according to two U.S. security officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion. British authoritie­s, who were meeting in emergency sessions in Manchester and London, did not immediatel­y confirm those reports.

The bombing appeared intended to inflict the maximum possible damage on young concertgoe­rs — many of them in their early teens — who were making their way out of the Manchester Arena. Police said the blast occurred about 10:30 p.m., minutes after pop star Ariana Grande had finished her set.

“This is currently being treated as a terrorist incident until police know otherwise,” the Greater Manchester Police

said in a statement.

British Prime Minister Theresa May issued a statement in the early hours of Tuesday saying that authoritie­s were “working to establish the full details of what is being treated by the police as an appalling terrorist attack.”

If confirmed as a terrorist attack, it would be the worst strike on British soil since 2005, when Islamist extremists bombed the London subway and a bus, killing 54 people.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said late Monday that there was “no informatio­n to indicate a specific credible threat involving music venues in the United States,” but added that Americans may see “increased security in and around public places and events as officials take additional precaution­s.”

Britain has been on high alert for a major attack for several years, with authoritie­s saying that a masscasual­ty attack was likely.

Grande expressed her sorrow in a tweet hours after the explosion, saying she was “broken. from the bottom of my heart, i am so sorry. i don’t have words.”

Manchester police said they were working closely with national authoritie­s to determine the cause of the explosion. Among the priorities for investigat­ors will be to figure out whether it was part of a broader plot.

Cellphone video showed chaotic scenes of people screaming and running in the aftermath of the blast. The arena was packed with attendees and pink balloons that had fallen from the ceiling during the final song. Initially, concertgoe­rs said they thought popping balloons had set off a panic.

But witnesses later reported seeing the prone bodies of those who had been wounded and killed, as well as others who were streaked with blood and were staggering away from the scene. Some were injured in the rush to get out, with people being trampled as thousands rushed to escape.

Grande, who is wildly popular in Britain and the United States, was “OK,” a spokesman for the singer’s record label told the Reuters news agency.

Concertgoe­rs said they saw nuts and bolts littering the ground near the blast scene and that the smell of explosives hung in the air.

The Wythenshaw­e hospital said it was dealing with “mass casualties.” Five other hospitals across the city were activated to treat the injured, and emergency supplies of blood were rushed in.

Many of those attending the concert were teenagers going to their first concert. Witnesses reported that outside the arena, parents were franticall­y attempting to locate their children. Many parents and teens later gathered at a nearby Holiday Inn that was establishe­d as a meeting point.

 ?? Rex Features via The Associated Press ?? People help the wounded after an explosion in Manchester, England, on Monday night. “We were all trying to flee the arena,” said a concertgoe­r.
Rex Features via The Associated Press People help the wounded after an explosion in Manchester, England, on Monday night. “We were all trying to flee the arena,” said a concertgoe­r.
 ?? Dave Thompson, Getty Images Europe ?? Concertgoe­rs are escorted from the Manchester Arena in England on Monday night. Nineteen people were reported dead in an explosion.
Dave Thompson, Getty Images Europe Concertgoe­rs are escorted from the Manchester Arena in England on Monday night. Nineteen people were reported dead in an explosion.

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