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G20 London Summit > Top News
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UK detains 5 'terrorists' ahead of G20By Fu Jing (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-04-01 07:48 LONDON: Police have confirmed that one international student and four British nationals had been detained under the Terrorism Act for allegedly plotting violence as world leaders gather in the UK capital for tomorrow's G20 summit.
The three men, aged 25, 19 and 16, and the 20-year-old woman - all of whom live in the Plymouth area - remain in custody, media reported.
Police released one of the women, also aged 20 and from Plymouth, late on Monday night after a hearing at Plymouth Magistrates' Court, the Guardian reported. Police have been hesitant to confirm the detainees were planning an attack during the G20 summit, media have said. The Guardian quoted Devon and Cornwall assistant chief constable Paul Netherton as saying of the literature: "It's political it relates to political organizations; it's not extreme but it's a different political view." It also quoted Netherton as saying of the weapons: "These are imitation firearms. The other devices were made of simple fireworks. They're probably not lethal." Thousands of activists from across Europe have arrived in London, and French police estimated 1,000 activists will travel to the city from France.
"We are monitoring all information relating to planned protests and advertised actions," the unnamed woman officer told China Daily. "We will have officers deployed at key locations plus a large number in reserve that can respond to deal with whatever takes place." As police increase security in the run-up to Thursday's summit, people living near the ExCeL center, where leaders will meet, have been directed to carry photo identification. London-based risk-analysis company Exclusive Analysis told China Daily on Monday that London would be "safe" around the G20 summit despite the possibility more groups will join the protests on Wednesday and Thursday. "We insist on our analysis unveiled last week, and there should be no large-scale violence in London around the summit," Exclusive Analysis division chief Pepe Egger said. "We have found that the media have played up the small-scale violence, but the city is basically safe." |