The Freeman

Blast kills 22 in UK concert

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MANCHESTER — Children were among 22 people killed in a suicide bombing at a pop concert in the British city of Manchester, the country's deadliest terror attack in 12 years.

Screaming fans, many of them teenagers, fled the venue in panic after the bomb blast, which came at the end of a concert by US star Ariana Grande in the northern English city late on Monday.

Police said the attacker was believed to be "carrying an improvised explosive device which he detonated causing this atrocity" and had himself died at the scene, but gave no further details about him.

One victim reported seeing nuts and bolts that could have been packed into a bomb and said he was injured by shrapnel, others saw glass after the blast smashed windows at the venue.

The blast occurred in the foyer of the indoor arena, a covered area which links the auditorium to Victoria Station, a train and tram hub.

Witnesses reported being near the arena's ticket machines and merchandis­e stores, as chaos ensued inside the concert hall.

"The arena was scarily still for five or six seconds, which felt like a lot longer, and then everybody just ran everywhere," Kennedy Hill, a teenager at the concert, told AFP.

"There were fathers carrying their little girls in tears," said Sebastian Diaz, a 19-year-old from Newcastle.

Ambulances and bomb disposal teams rushed to the venue, as family members franticall­y searched for their loved ones, and residents opened their doors to stranded concert-goers after trains were cancelled.

Greater Manchester Police chief Ian Hopkins said Tuesday there was an unspecifie­d number of children among the 22 dead, while 59 people were also injured.

Police believe the blast was carried out by one man and are trying to find out whether he was acting alone.

The attack was the deadliest in Britain since July 7, 2005 when four suicide bombers inspired by Al-Qaeda attacked London's transport system during rush hour, killing 52 people and wounding 700 more.

It also revived memories of the November 2015 attack at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris in which armed men wearing explosive belts stormed in and killed 90 people. That attack was claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group.

British Prime Minister Theresa May condemned the "appalling terrorist attack" and suspended her campaign for the general election on June 8 along with chief opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn.

US President Donald Trump led condolence­s from political leaders across the globe, as well as stars from the world of music and football.

Trump, speaking during a visit to Bethlehem, said "evil losers" were behind the attack.

Russian President Vladimir Putin condemned a "cynical, inhuman crime" and offered to boost antiterror­ism cooperatio­n with Britain, while German Chancellor Angela Merke land French President Emmanuel Macron also expressed condolence­s.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd described the attack as "barbaric" and "deliberate­ly targeting some of the most vulnerable in our society – young people, children out at a pop concert."

"The great city of Manchester has been affected by terrorism before. Its spirit was not bowed," said Rudd.

Britain's third biggest city was hit in 1996 by a massive car bomb planted at a shopping centre by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) which wounded more than 200 people.

May chaired an emergency ministeria­l meeting at around 0800 GMT.

Grande has reportedly suspended her world tour following the attack.

"Broken. From the bottom of my heart, I am so, so sorry. I don't have words," the 23-year-old, who is popular with teens and pre-teens, wrote on Twitter.

Police were called to the scene at the Manchester Arena, on the edge of the city centre, at 2133 GMT.

"A lot of these people at the concert were small children and teenagers like my daughter. These were Christmas presents for the majority of people. What should have been a happy occasion has ended like this, it is just tragic," witness Stephanie Hill told AFP.

Another witness, Gary Walker, told BBC radio he was hit by shrapnel in his foot and his wife sustained a stomach wound as they waited for their daughters.

"Someone came through the doors, then bang," he said.

The injured were being treated in eight hospitals across the city.

Facebook gave users in Manchester the option of marking themselves as safe following the explosion.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Helpers attend to injured people inside the Manchester Arena, Manchester, Britain, after a blast.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Helpers attend to injured people inside the Manchester Arena, Manchester, Britain, after a blast.

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