USA TODAY US Edition

Mixed portrait emerges of Manchester bomber

Neighbors describe a ‘normal lad’ but moody, antisocial

- Kim Hjelmgaard @khjelmgaar­d

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND An intense confrontat­ion years ago in the suburb where suicide bomber Salman Abedi lived took on added meaning this week for Sandra Locke.

Abedi had stepped behind her daughter’s car as she tried to reverse it down the narrow street that separates the terraced houses, Locke said. He refused to move and threatened her daughter with violence.

“He came right up to the car window and said that he was going to do this and do that,” Locke recalled. “She was really frightened.”

Abedi’s family ties and travels in Libya drew severe scruti- ny Wednesday as authoritie­s pieced together what led the British-born man to carry out the deadliest terror attack in the United Kingdom in more than a decade.

The attack at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester Arena on Monday left 22 dead and scores injured. Children as young as 8 and an off-duty police officer were among those killed.

Abedi’s father, Ramadan Abedi, and younger brother, Hashem,

were arrested in Libya on Wednesday. Another brother, Ismail, was arrested in Manchester on Tuesday.

Almost 1,000 military personnel were deployed Wednesday to protect public sites and key landmarks, major airports and transporta­tion hubs and large concert venues in cities from Belfast to Birmingham.

U.S. Africa Command reported that Abedi, 22, spent three weeks in Libya and returned to Manchester within days of Monday’s bombing. The purpose of the trip remains unknown.

The Islamic State quickly claimed responsibi­lity for the bombing and said Abedi was one of their soldiers.

But British authoritie­s said they have yet to determine whether the claim is valid and what, if any, assistance the Manchester college student received in building the bomb, picking his target and executing the attack.

Neighbors in the down-at-heel suburb where Abedi lived recalled him as a quiet young man who showed no obvious signs of radicaliza­tion but found he could be abrasive at times. He had recently taken to wearing traditiona­l Islamic dress.

“He never said hello, not so much as a ‘good morning ’ or ‘how are you’ or anything,” Locke said.

James Keary, who grew up in the south Manchester area where the Abedis lived, described him as tall and skinny and the youngest of four children.

“He just looked like a normal lad going about his business, going to the shops. I would pass by him on the street, but he never had much to say,” Keary said. “He used to fly a flag with Arabic writing on it hanging out of the window, but there are a lot of different types of people around here, so I didn’t think much of it. I can’t believe he did this.”

The red-brick terrace house the Abedi family lived in the Whalley Range suburb of Manchester remained cordoned off by police Wednesday as the investigat­ion continued.

“I would see him in the garden or in the car. He was pretty antisocial,” neighbor Nisa Akhtar said.

Akhtar said she heard loud bangs when police raided Abedi’s house earlier this week and detained his older brother, Ismail, who has not been charged.

“My first thought was, ‘Oh, gosh, this is like in the movies,’ ” Akhtar said.

Mohammad Fadil, a 25-yearold Internet technology consultant of Libyan descent, said he would see Abedi around Manchester but did not know him well. “He was distant, quiet. He acted by himself and represents only himself,” he said.

Fadil said he knew Abedi’s older brother, Ismail, though, whom he described as “a very normal citizen of this country. He was recently married. He goes on vacations. Completely normal.”

Fadil said he would often see Ismail at the Didsbury Mosque in Manchester, a meeting point for the city’s Arab and North African Muslim population.

“If there are issues in the community, if anybody has seen anything they would have reported it,” Fadil said outside the mosque, referring to concern that not enough is being done to weed out potential Islamic radicals in the United Kingdom. As Fadil spoke, a car drove by the mosque and a man leaned out the window and shouted: “Shut it down.”

“We are not terrorists. We are doctors,” Fadil said.

Hamid El-Sayed, who has worked for the United Nations on curbing radicaliza­tion and now works at Manchester University, told the BBC that Abedi had a “bad relationsh­ip” with his family. “Eventually he was doing very bad at his university, at his education, and he didn’t complete, and they tried to take him back to Libya several times,” he said.

The Abedis emigrated to London from Tripoli in the 1990s after Moammar Gadhafi’s security authoritie­s issued an arrest warrant for them. They eventually sought political asylum in Britain and settled in Manchester’s sizable Libyan community. The elder Abedis later moved back to Libya, where Ramadan Abedi, the father, is now the administra­tive manager of the Tripoli’s Central Security force.

Ramadan Abedi told the Associated Press his son visited Libya about a month and a half ago and denied he was linked to militants or responsibl­e for the attack. French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said British investigat­ors told French officials they suspect Abedi also may have traveled to Syria, France’s BFMTV and

The New York Times reported. Abedi said his son sounded “normal” when he spoke to him five days ago.

Late Wednesday, Libyan officials said counterter­rorism officials arrested the bomber’s father as well as the younger brother, Hashem Abedi, the Associated Press reports. Hashem was taken into custody on suspicion of links to the Islamic State, while the father was detained to be questioned, officials said.

Abedi said Salman planned to travel to Saudi Arabia and then to Libya to spend the Muslim holy month of Ramadan with family. “We don’t believe in killing innocents,” Abedi said.

 ?? LEON NEAL, GETTY IMAGES ?? A police officer speaks to a neighbor Wednesday near the Manchester home of Salman Abedi.
LEON NEAL, GETTY IMAGES A police officer speaks to a neighbor Wednesday near the Manchester home of Salman Abedi.
 ?? AP ?? Abedi is blamed for Monday’s deadly concert bombing.
AP Abedi is blamed for Monday’s deadly concert bombing.
 ?? DANNY LAWSON, AP ?? Investigat­ors search the property of Salman Abedi. Police raided the home after a bomb killed more than 20 people at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England.
DANNY LAWSON, AP Investigat­ors search the property of Salman Abedi. Police raided the home after a bomb killed more than 20 people at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England.

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