Philippine Daily Inquirer

Manchester suicide bomber identified

22-year-old suspect was known to security services, recently returned from Libya

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MANCHESTER— Salman Abedi, the suicide bomber who killed 22 people in an attack on a pop concert in Manchester, was a business student who dropped out of university.

Born to a devoutly Islamic Libyan family in Britain’s third biggest city, newspapers said he was known to the security services and the Financial Times said he had turned to radical Islam in recent years.

Abedi, 22, worshipped at a suburban mosque, where his father was a well-known face who sometimes performed the call to prayer.

He was named by police and Prime Minister Theresa May the day after the deadly attack, which also left dozens wounded, on the concert by US pop star Ariana Grande, who has a large teenage girl following.

“The perpetrato­r was Salman Ramadan Abedi, who was born and brought up in Britain,” May said, condemning his actions as “callous and cowardly.”

Abedi’s family has lived in the Fallowfiel­d area of south Manchester for at least 10 years, according to The Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Armed police raided an address in the modestly well-todo area on Tuesday, carrying out a controlled explosion to gain entry.

A 23-year-old man was also arrested in the south of the city in connection with the attack.

Fallowfiel­d resident Peter Jones, 53, described the area as “quiet and safe.” Jones told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that he was “shocked” and “surprised” when he heard that the suspect was from there.

Media reports said Abedi’s parents fled Libya to escape the regime of former dictator Moamar Gadhafi.

Around 16,000 Libyans live in Britain and Manchester is home to the largest community, according to the BBC. It was a focus of celebratio­ns when the Gadhafi regime fell in 2011.

Reports said the suicide bomber was the second youngest of four children, including another son and one daughter.

One member of Manchester’s Libyan community told The Guardian newspaper: “He was such a quiet boy, always very respectful toward me.

“His brother Ismael is outgoing, but Salman was very quiet. He is such an unlikely person to have done this.”

Abedi had recently returned from Libya, according to The Times newspaper’s front page on Wednesday, which cited a school friend as saying he left three weeks ago and returned in the last few days.

Police said they were urgently seeking to establish whether Abedi worked alone or acted as part of a larger network.

Abedi’s family was closely linked to the Didsbury Mosque, a Victorian former Methodist chapel in a leafy suburb that was bought in 1967 by donors from the Syrian Arab community.

His father Ramadan had sometimes performed the call to prayer and his brother Ismael had been a volunteer.

However, one senior figure from the mosque, Mohammed Saeed, told The Guardian that when he once gave a sermon denouncing terror, Abedi stared him down.

“Salman showed me a face of hate after that sermon,” Saeed said of the 2015 encounter.

Abedi began studying business and management at Salford University in Manchester in 2014, a source told the Press Associatio­n news agency, but he dropped out after two years and did not complete his degree.

Abedi used an improvised explosive device, apparently packed with metal, to massacre concertgoe­rs and end his own life.

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