Yuma Sun

UK makes ‘significan­t’ bomb arrest; attack seen imminent

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LONDON — British police made an apparent breakthrou­gh Saturday in the race-against-time subway bombing investigat­ion with what they called a “very significan­t” arrest, but the country remained on a “critical” alert, meaning that another attack is judged imminent.

Police arrested an 18-year-old man in the port of Dover — the main ferry link to France — and then launched a massive armed search in the southweste­rn London suburb of Sunbury in which they evacuated residents, establishe­d a huge cordon and imposed a no-fly zone above the property being searched.

Police did not say that they had nabbed the man believed to have planted the bomb that partially exploded on a crowded London subway train Friday morning, but Home Secretary Amber Rudd and others said the arrest was of major importance.

The man is being held under the Terrorism Act and has been brought to London for questionin­g. His identity is a closely guarded secret and police have implored the press not to speculate while the inquiry unfolds. Authoritie­s would not say if they thought the man was trying to flee to France on a Dover ferry.

It’s clear that Britain’s police and security services are still worried. Hundreds of soldiers patrolled public areas Saturday, freeing up police for the bombing investigat­ion. Rudd said the country’s terror threat level — which was raised Friday night to the highest possible level — will stay there until the independen­t Joint Terrorism Analysis Center is convinced the threat of imminent attack has eased.

The homemade bomb on the rush-hour train only partially detonated — Rudd said it could have been much worse — and there are fears that accomplice­s may have similar devices. Experts said the bomb could have caused many fatalities if it had functioned properly.

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