Daily Dispatch

Britain on highest alert after attack

Thousands of soldiers deployed to key sites

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BRITAIN prepared to deploy soldiers at key sites yesterday, having raised its terror threat level to maximum after a suicide bomber massacred 22 people at a pop concert in Manchester on Monday.

Addressing the nation from her Downing Street office, Prime Minister Theresa May warned late on Tuesday that a new attack “may be imminent” and there was a possibilit­y of “a wider group of individual­s linked to this attack”.

May said the threat level was being raised from severe to critical on the recommenda­tion of the intelligen­ce services and she was activating a plan for armed military personnel to assist police.

Her dramatic statement came after 22-year-old Salman Abedi, a Briton of Libyan descent, was identified as the perpetrato­r behind the deadly attack at a concert by teen idol Ariana Grande.

The Islamic State jihadist group claimed responsibi­lity for the carnage, which was condemned by world leaders including US President Donald Trump, who branded people carrying out atrocities “evil losers”.

Police said soldiers would initially be on guard duties at fixed points and could also be sent to patrol transport hubs, concerts and sports events.

The plan, which has never before been used and is codenamed Operation Temperer, was first revealed after the November 2015 Paris terror attacks and is believed to allow up to 5 000 troops to be deployed.

British media said Abedi was born in Manchester, northwest England, and that his Libyan parents had fled the regime of Muammar Gaddafi.

Police staged an armed raid on a Manchester address believed to be where Abedi lived, carrying out a controlled explosion to gain entry after arresting a 23-year-old man earlier on Tuesday as part of the investigat­ion.

Abedi was reported to be a former business student who dropped out of university and turned to radical Islam.

Britain’s best-selling newspaper The Sun carried pictures yesterday of eight-year-old Saffie Rose Roussos, who was killed in the attack, and of Abedi under the words “PURE” and “EVIL” respective­ly.

Monday’s attack came just over two weeks before Britain votes in a general election and campaignin­g was suspended by political parties.

It is the latest in a series of deadly incidents across Europe claimed by IS jihadists that have coincided with an offensive on IS redoubts in Syria and Iraq carried out by Western forces.

The suicide bombing came at the conclusion of Grande’s concert at the 21 000-capacity Manchester Arena, one of Europe’s largest indoor venues.

Witnesses described the horror when the bomber blew himself up outside one of the exits as the mostly youthful audience was leaving, with many parents waiting outside to collect their children.

“When we left, down the stairs there were probably early teenagers lying on the floor covered in blood and blood on the walls where they’d been laid, so it was horrifying,” concert-goer Alex Grayson said.

Terrified fans, many teenage girls, fled the arena in panic. Grande, a 23-year-old former child TV star, described herself as “broken” by the attack.

Some 59 people were taken to hospital, many with life-threatenin­g conditions.

In the city centre, thousands gathered for a multi-faith vigil outside the town hall to remember the victims, with defiant chants of “Manchester! Manchester!” ringing around.

The attack was the deadliest in Britain since July 7 2005 when four suicide bombers attacked London’s transport system, killing 52 people. – AFP

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