Nelson Mail

Tensions rise in wakeof bombing

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BRITAIN: President Donald Trump said on Thursday that ‘‘deeply troubling’’ leaks to US media about the Manchester suicide bombing would be investigat­ed, after irate British police stopped sharing informatio­n with US agencies.

British Prime Minister Theresa May raised British concerns with Trump at a NATO summit in Brussels, telling him intelligen­ce shared between their two countries had to remain secure, in a rare public show of dissatisfa­ction with Britain’s closest security ally.

‘‘The alleged leaks coming out of government agencies are deeply troubling,’’ Trump said in a statement released after he arrived in Brussels.

‘‘I am asking the Department of Justice and other relevant agencies to launch a complete review of this matter, and if appropriat­e, the culprit should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.’’

The row comes as British police stepped up their investigat­ion into a suspected network behind Salman Abedi, a 22-year-old British-born man with Libyan parents who blew himself up on Monday night at the Manchester Arena indoor venue after a concert by US singer Ariana Grande

The singer’s fans are mostly children and teenagers and the explosion killed 22 people, ranging from an eight-year-old schoolgirl to parents who had come to pick up their children.

Police are holding eight people in custody in connection with the attack and bomb disposal units were helping in searches as officers raided properties across the city.

‘‘I want to reassure people that the arrests that we have made are significan­t, and initial searches of premises have revealed items that we believe are very important to the investigat­ion,’’ Manchester’s police chief Ian Hopkins said.

With the official threat level raised to ‘‘critical’’, meaning a further attack could be imminent, troops have been deployed to free up police, and armed officers patrolled trains for the first time in Britain.

The state-run National Health Service said all 27 major trauma units in England had told staff to be prepared for a possible attack, ahead of the weekend and a public holiday on Monday.

Abedi had recently returned from Libya, where his father and younger brother were arrested by a militia on Wednesday.

Abedi passed through Istanbul on his way to Europe, Turkish security officials said but said they had no records of him entering Syria during his travels as had been suggested on Wednesday by the French interior minister.

A source with knowledge of the investigat­ion said Abedi might have made the bomb himself or with some assistance from an accomplice. That was a change from previous thinking that a bomb-maker might be at large.

‘‘The focus is still the search for accomplice­s and the network but he could have made this bomb himself,’’ the source said.

Over the past three, days several key details of the investigat­ion, including the name of the bomber, first came out in US media, angering British police who feared such leaks risked compromisi­ng their investigat­ion.

May raised the matter with Trump as they gathered for a group photograph at the NATO summit.

‘‘She expressed the view that the intelligen­ce sharing relationsh­ip we have with the US is hugely important and valuable, but that the informatio­n that we share should be kept secure,’’ a British government source said.

The decision to stop sharing police informatio­n with US agencies was an extraordin­ary step for Britain, which is usually at pains to emphasise its ‘‘special relationsh­ip’’ with the United States.

‘‘This is until such time as we have assurances that no further unauthoris­ed disclosure­s will occur,’’ said a counter-terrorism source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. British authoritie­s did not say that the investigat­ion had in fact been compromise­d by the leaks.

The attack injured 116 people, of whom 75 were admitted to hospital and 23 remain in a very serious condition, health authoritie­s said.

Queen Elizabeth visited the Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, where some of the casualties have been treated, and was filmed chatting with a girl lying injured on a ward. She described the attack as ‘‘very wicked’’.

A minute’s silence was observed in honour of the victims at a square in central Manchester, after which crowds broke into an emotional chorus of ‘‘Don’t Look Back in Anger’’, a hit song by the band Oasis who are from the city.

The city’s two giant soccer clubs, Manchester United and Manchester City, laid aside their rivalry to jointly donate £1 million to an emergency fund set up to support families affected by the attack. They labelled their initiative ‘‘A City United’’.

The bombing has caused revulsion across the world for targeting children and teenagers. Former US President Barack Obama, meeting German Chancellor Angela Merkel at an event in Berlin, said the pair were ‘‘heartbroke­n‘‘, while Trump told fellow NATO leaders the attack was ‘‘savage’’ and ‘‘barbaric’’.

Many European cities, including Paris, Berlin and Brussels, have suffered attacks in the past two years, underlinin­g the importance of confidenti­al intelligen­ce cooperatio­n. Britain routinely shares intelligen­ce with the United States bilaterall­y, and as part of the ‘‘Five Eyes’’ network which also includes Australia, Canada and New Zealand.

Trump was widely criticised this month after it emerged he had discussed sensitive Syria-related intelligen­ce, originatin­g from an ally, with Russian officials at a White House meeting. May said at the time Britain would continue to share informatio­n with Washington.

Pictures published by the New York Times included remains of the bomb and of the rucksack carried by the suicide bomber, and showed blood stains amid the wreckage.

In a statement, the New York Times defended its decision to publish the images, saying they were neither graphic nor disrespect­ful of victim. ‘‘Our coverage of Monday’s horrific attack has been both comprehens­ive and responsibl­e,’’ the newspaper said. Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A soldier and police officer walk past the Houses of Parliament in London as security patrols are increased following the Manchester bombing.
PHOTO: REUTERS A soldier and police officer walk past the Houses of Parliament in London as security patrols are increased following the Manchester bombing.
 ??  ?? Salman Abedi killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert but police do not yet know if he was working alone.
Salman Abedi killed 22 people at an Ariana Grande concert but police do not yet know if he was working alone.

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