U.K. police nab suspect in botched blasts (AP) Updated: 2005-07-28 11:07
Police stormed a brown-brick duplex Wednesday and used a stun gun to arrest a
Somali suspected of being one of four men behind botched attacks in London — a
breakthrough that could yield the inside story on terror bombings that set the
British capital on edge, Associated Press reported.
Yasin Hassan Omar, 24, was carted to a top-security police station in London,
and a key official called the arrest significant — but warned that until all the
bombers were in custody, the threat remained.
Dozens of anti-terrorist police and bomb disposal experts, some in heavy body
armor, swept into a neighborhood of Britain's second-largest city to arrest
Omar, a Somali citizen with British residency who is suspected in the botched
July 21 attack on the Warren Street subway station.
 This photo provided by ABC News purports to
show one of the unexploded devices found in the trunk of a car belonging
to Shehzad Tanweer, one of the July 7 bombers who attacked the London
Underground. [AP] | "They had him dressed in one of those white suits. He had plastic cuffs on
the front," said one neighbor, Andy Wilkinson, who recognized Omar from police
images of suspects. Police use such suits to preserve physical evidence that may
be on a suspect.
Police also detained three other men at a house about two miles away, saying
the arrests were linked to the second set of failed bombings, but declining
further comment. In all, eleven suspects are being held, though only Omar is
thought to be one of the bombers, police said.
Interrogations of Omar may be key to determining whether the second set of
bombings July 21 are linked to the July 7 suicide attacks that killed 56 people,
including the four bombers.
ABC News, meanwhile, reported that British authorities investigating the July
7 attack had found 12 bombs and four improvised detonators in the trunk of the
car of one of the suspected suicide bombers 35 miles outside of London five days
after the deadly explosions.
The network broadcast photos of the findings, including a glass bottle
apparently packed with explosives and covered in nails that could be used as
shrapnel, and said they provided important clues about who was behind the
attacks.
After arresting Omar, police evacuated up to 100 homes and sent a bomb squad
into the Small Heath neighborhood in Birmingham, a city some 120 miles northwest
of London.
They allowed a few residents to pick up belongings during the day, but kept
up cordons near Omar's rundown house next to a sprawling park. The blue-framed
door was ajar as investigators moved back and forth between the home and a white
police trailer parked out front.
Kati Stewart, 31, a health care worker who lives across the street from Omar,
said she'd seen four men coming and going frequently over the past two weeks.
"They would come at 2 a.m., and then when you looked in the morning, the car had
gone," she said.
But Omar generally attracted little attention in the diverse neighborhood,
where residents of many ethnic backgrounds and faiths — Indian, Pakistani and
Irish; Christian, Hindu and Muslim — say they live together peacefully.
One woman said she believed Omar had lived in the close-knit area for less
than a year. "Everybody knew that he didn't interact with the neighbors much at
all," said the 38-year-old neighbor, who would give her name only as Anna.
Other raids were carried out Wednesday in south London's Stockwell district,
where officers arrested three women on suspicion of "harboring offenders," and
on two more London homes, where no arrests were made but forensic tests were
conducted, police said.
Police were still seeking three other men believed involved in the failed
bombing attempts.
"I must emphasize that until these men are arrested, they remain a threat,"
said Peter Clarke, the head of London's police anti-terrorist unit, though he
called Omar's arrest "an important development in the investigation."
Police also released another photograph of a suspect who tried to detonate a
bomb on a train near the Shepherd's Bush subway station. The man took off a blue
T-shirt after the attempted bombing, changed into a white sleeveless shirt and
jumped on a bus he rode until the end of the line.
Prime Minister Tony Blair appealed for greater international cooperation in
the fight against terrorism and urged the United Nations to make a strong
statement on the issue. A succession of world leaders praised Blair's resolute
response to the July 7 attacks on London's transit system.
The world must not allow "the terrorists to divide us by nation or by race or
by religion," said Blair.
The failed bombs planted were stored in clear plastic food containers and put
into dark-colored bags or backpacks. Police said the bombs were similar to
another found abandoned in a park Saturday, raising fears that a fifth bomber
was on the loose.
Of the four men suspected of planting the explosives July 21, police have
identified two — Omar and Muktar Said Ibrahim, 27, also known as Muktar Mohammed
Said. Both are children of refugees, the government said.
Omar arrived from Somalia in 1992. Said came to Britain in 1990 from Eritrea,
his family said. He was granted residency in 1992 and British citizenship in
September 2004, the Home Office said.
Said was part of a gang that carried out a series of muggings in the
mid-1990s but qualified for early release in 1998, the British news agency Press
Association reported. When he left prison, Said had a beard, had adopted Islamic
dress and was very devout, Press Association said.
Police are also looking into whether Said attended the Finsbury Park or
Brixton mosques in London, once considered magnets for radical Islamic clerics,
and whether he met shoe-bomber Richard Reid, who is serving a life sentence in a
U.S. prison after a failed attempt in 2001 to blow up an airplane, the news
agency said.
Explosives experts were also examining suspicious material found in a north
London apartment connected to both Omar and Said.
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