Home>News Center>World
         
 

UK bomb probe focuses on chemist, Briton
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-07-15 09:00

British and FBI officials investigating an al-Qaida connection in the London terror attacks focused Thursday on an Egyptian-born chemist who studied in the United States and an 18-year-old Briton of Pakistani descent believed to have set off the bomb aboard a red double-decker bus.

Security forces in camouflage searched the Beeston area of the northern city of Leeds as police tried to crack the network thought to have given the dead suspects planning, logistical and bomb-making support.

"We don't know if there is a fifth man, or a sixth man, a seventh man, or an eighth man," London's Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair told foreign journalists.

A bomb disposal officer working with a bomb disposal robot opens up a property on Lodge Lane, Beeston, Leeds, northern England, Thursday July 14, 2005. The property is being investigated in connection with the London bombings of last Thursday. (AP
A bomb disposal officer working with a bomb disposal robot opens up a property on Lodge Lane, Beeston, Leeds, northern England, Thursday July 14, 2005. The property is being investigated in connection with the London bombings of last Thursday. [AP]
British authorities were seeking a Pakistani Briton with possible ties to al-Qaida followers in the United States, news reports said. They said he may have organized the attacks and chosen the targets, leaving Britain the day before the July 7 bombings.

"Al-Qaida is not an organization. Al-Qaida is a way of working ... but this has the hallmarks of that approach," Blair said of the attacks, which killed 54 people, including four bombers. "Al-Qaida clearly has the ability to provide training ... to provide expertise ... and I think that is what has occurred here."

ABC News, citing unidentified officials, reported that the attacks were connected to an al-Qaida plot planned two years ago in Lahore, Pakistan. Names on a computer that authorities seized last year from Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, an alleged Pakistani computer expert for al-Qaida, matched a suspected cell of young Britons of Pakistani origin, most of whom lived near Luton, where the alleged suicide bombers met up on their way to London shortly before last week's blasts, according to the report.

Authorities have now discovered ties between Mohammed Sidique Khan — one of the July 7 bombers — and members of that cell who were arrested last year, ABC said.

FBI agents in Raleigh, N.C., joined the search for the chemist, Magdy Asi el-Nashar, a 33-year-old former North Carolina State University graduate student. The doors were locked Thursday at the building at Leeds University where he recently taught chemistry.

And in a further international development in the inquiry, Jamaica's government said it was investigating a Jamaican-born Briton as one of the bombers.
Page: 12



Space shuttle Discovery launch delayed
Blair plans measures to uproot extremism
Pakistan train crash carnage kills 128
 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

China to launch manned spacecraft in October

 

   
 

PLA on course to cut 200,000 personnel

 

   
 

Japan approves oil drilling, China protests

 

   
 

China plans to build 10 more nuclear reactors

 

   
 

Cross-Straits exchanges widen with business

 

   
 

EU, China pledge to strive for partnership

 

   
  UK bomb probe focuses on chemist, Briton
   
  South Korea, Japan, U.S. discuss extending talks
   
  Japan, US, South Korea meet for nuclear talks on North Korea
   
  Judge: Saddam trial could begin next month
   
  DPRK: Nuke-free peninsula our goal
   
  Pakistan train crash carnage kills 128
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement