Explosives-Packed Cars Found in London

elwood123

New Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2007
Messages
171
Reaction score
0
By DAVID STRINGER
Associated Press Writer
Published June 29, 2007, 3:14 PM CDT
LONDON -- Police in London's bustling nightclub and theater district on Friday defused a car bomb that could have killed hundreds after an ambulance crew spotted smoke coming from a Mercedes filled with a lethal mix of gasoline, propane and nails. Hours later, police confirmed a second explosives-rigged car was found nearby.

The first car bomb, found near Piccadilly Circus, was powerful enough to have caused "significant injury or loss of life" at a time when hundreds were in the area, British anti-terror police chief Peter Clarke said.

Clarke said Friday evening that the second car -- another Mercedes -- was originally parked illegally in same area, but had been towed from the West Eng to an impound lot near Hyde Park.

"The vehicle was found to contain very similar materials to those that had been found in the first car," he said. "There was a considerable amount of fuel and gas canisters. As in the first vehicle, there was also a quantity of nails. This like the first device was potentially viable."

The discoveries came just ahead of the second anniversary of the July 7, 2005, suicide bombings that killed 52 people on three London subways and a bus.

"We are currently facing the most serious and sustained threat to our security from international terrorism," Britain's new home secretary, Jacqui Smith, said after an emergency meeting of top officials.

In Washington, two officials said British authorities found no link between the defused car bomb and any terrorist group during the early hours of the investigation. The officials, who were briefed on the inquiry, said the investigation had yielded no suspects and no definitive description of anyone leaving the vehicle. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case.

Police were examining footage from closed-circuit TV cameras, Clarke said, hoping the surveillance network that covers much of central London will help them track down the drivers of the cars.

Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., the ranking member of the House Homeland Security Committee who was briefed on the investigation, said British authorities had recovered a cell phone that they believed was to be the trigger for the explosion.

"They found a cell phone and it was going to be used to detonate the bomb," he said.

The events unfolded when an ambulance crew -- responding to a call just before 1:30 a.m. about a person who had fallen at a Haymarket nightclub -- noticed smoke coming from a car parked in front of the building, Clarke said.

The crew alerted police, and a bomb squad manually disabled the device, Clarke said.

Photographs of the metallic green Mercedes discovered first show a canister bearing the words "patio gas," indicating it was propane, next to the car. The back door was open with blankets spilling out. The car was removed from the scene after a bomb squad disabled the explosives.

The Haymarket thoroughfare is packed with restaurants, bars, a cinema complex and West End theaters, and was buzzing at that hour. "Phantom of the Opera" is playing at Her Majesty's Theater down the street.

It was ladies' night Thursday, nicknamed "Sugar 'N' Spice," at the Tiger Tiger nightclub, a three-story venue that at full capacity can pack in 1,770 people and stays open until 3 a.m.

Police also were investigating the possibility that the planned attack could have been criminal in nature. Authorities closed the Piccadilly Circus subway station for eight hours and cordoned off a 10-block area around the scene.

The incident triggered a series of security scares across central London, and police closed Park Lane, Fleet Street and nearby Chancery Lane to investigate other suspicious vehicles.

A British security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the security details, said there were similarities between the device and vehicle bombs used by insurgents in Iraq. But the two officials in Washington said it was too early in the investigation to tell if those similarities were significant.

The British security official also said the domestic spy agency MI5 would examine possible connections between Friday's bomb attempt and at least two similar foiled plots -- to attack a London nightclub in 2004 and to pack limousines in New York with gas canisters and shrapnel.

In the 2004 plot, accused members of an al-Qaida-linked terror cell were convicted of conspiring to cause explosions. One of the possible targets M15 overheard them discussing was the Ministry of Sound, one of London's biggest and most famous nightclubs.

One man is heard saying the plan was to "Blow the whole thing up."

Gordon Brown, who only Wednesday succeeded Tony Blair as prime minister, called it a reminder that Britain faces a serious and continuous threat of terrorist attacks: "I will stress to the Cabinet that the vigilance must be maintained over the next few days."

There had been no prior intelligence of planned attacks from the al-Qaida terror network, a British government official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the investigation.

Londoners were relatively unfazed by the news. People crowded onto buses and subway trains during the afternoon rush hour, shopping streets were busy and sidewalk cafes did brisk business.

"Sure, it's disturbing, and obviously it reminds everyone of 7/7," said Ian Hiskos, 32, eating at a cafe across the block from the police cordon on Haymarket. "I try not to think about these things."

The terror threat level in Britain has remained at "severe" -- meaning a terrorist attack is highly likely -- since last August.

On Friday, Metropolitan Police said it sent more officers on the streets of central London. Authorities also stepped up security at Wimbledon.

One analyst said the bombers could be trying to send Britain's new leader a message.

"It's a way of testing Gordon Brown," said Bob Ayers, a security expert at the Chatham House think tank. "It's not too far-fetched to assume it was designed to expedite the decision on withdrawal (from Iraq)."

The U.S. government urged Americans abroad to be vigilant but officials said they saw no potential terrorist threat in the United States ahead of next week's July 4 Independence Day holiday.

"At this time we are characterizing this as a localized incident in London," said Laura Keehner, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security.

New York strengthened its already tight security as a precaution, putting additional police in Times Square and the mass transit system.

"We're going to ramp up a little bit, but nothing dramatic," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said on his weekly radio show. "We'll take a little bit of extra precaution. Some of you will notice, some of you won't -- but we have to be cognizant."

Explosives-Packed Cars Found in London | Chicago Tribune
 
Uh oh! They're lucky they caught it before it happened. It would be a disaster if it happened.
 
im really hates that crap!

but i cant believe this news at bank what horribles its second times and first time got real bomb include bus,people,kids,etc!!!!!!!! but im sure nobody any people getting hurt like that since 2005.

if my fears for me going to England again for trips dues security reasons good grief! i would getting more careful when i will going trips to England one days and not getting hurt at me!

im hope in England need more low profiles they wont getting more real bomb in future im hope so
 
Update:

GLASGOW, Scotland (CNN) -- Smoke billowed out of the main terminal at Glasgow airport and witnesses spoke of fleeing after a driver tried to ram a burning four-wheel-drive vehicle drove inside the building.

Witnesses reported a man driving the blazing Jeep Cherokee vehicle into the departures section of the main terminal of the airport Saturday afternoon....

Witnesses tell of airport horror - CNN.com
 
gee.. i feel they pick them because its closer to their terriost home.

i hope nothing serious happen on 7/7/07
 
"...Britain raised its security alert level to critical — the highest possible level indicating terrorist attacks are imminent.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said she had raised the level and ordered security to be tightened in response to events in London and Scotland over last 48 hours...."
 
Er...part of the problem is London is also known as Londonstan....

We haven't see anything yet...:whistle:
 
"...Britain raised its security alert level to critical — the highest possible level indicating terrorist attacks are imminent.

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said she had raised the level and ordered security to be tightened in response to events in London and Scotland over last 48 hours...."

I am seeing the alert warnings lit up here in the DC area. IT has been more than a year since we saw those so it was like deja vu after 9-11 when all those "If You See Any Suspicous Activity, Pls call ....." were lit up.
 
It's a good thing it didn't blow up! I wonder why they are targetting England. I know UK government is supporting the Iraq war but most british people are against it. Not that it makes any differance. These people who cause terrorist attack like that are evil. So is this war in Iraq. It seems it's just the innocent ones who suffer though.
 
Terrorists are targeting England because there are a higher number of terror cells there compared to the United States.

Aside from that, Islamic terrorists don't care who they kill or whether the British are for or against the war. They kill anyone and everyone for Jihad.
 
...Aside from that, Islamic terrorists don't care who they kill or whether the British are for or against the war. They kill anyone and everyone for Jihad.
True. They even kidnap and kill humanitarian aid workers and journalists who try to help them!
 
SIX of the eight people arrested over a suspected al-Qaeda plot to detonate car bombs in London and Scotland are doctors, including one arrested as he tried to leave Australia, British media reported today.
Seven people arrested so far in Great Britain include an Iraqi doctor trained in Baghdad, a Jordanian neurosurgeon, an Indian medic, and a Lebanese man, The Guardian reported today.

It said five of the seven were doctors working and training in the National Health Service, and that all seven were foreign-born nationals.

The neurosurgeon, Mohammed Asha, 26, is currently believed by counter-terrorism investigators to have been the ringleader of the cell, it said.

It's believed Asha and his wife were the man and woman arrested by anti-terror officers who chased down a car on a motorway in north-west England on Saturday.

The hunt for those responsible for the plot spread to Australia yesterday, with the arrest of an Indian-trained doctor living and working on Queensland's Gold Coast.

The 27-year-old hospital registrar was arrested by counter-terrorism police at Brisbane International Airport just before midnight (AEST), after a tip-off from British police.

It's understood the Indian national was headed for India via the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, on a one-way air ticket, but had not resigned from his job at The Gold Coast Hospital.

Prime Minister John Howard said a second person was helping police with their inquiries. Earlier, the Queensland government said the second man was also a doctor at the same hospital.

Both had been recruited from the city of Liverpool, in the north of England, to work in Queensland's understaffed hospitals.

Howard said the government had no information to suggest a terrorist attack on Australia was imminent.

"We have no information suggesting that there is now a greater likelihood of any terrorist incident in Australia than there was late last week," he told reporters.

But he warned Australians not to drop their guard, as the incidents in London and Glasgow demonstrated a terrorist strike remained a possibility.

British authorities say their investigations are developing minute by minute, as they hunt those behind the plot to detonate two car bombs left in central London early on Friday and an attack on Glasgow airport in Scotland on Saturday using a fuel-laden jeep.

Police sources named one of those arrested in Britain as Bilal Abdulla, who qualified as a doctor in Iraq in 2004, and the other as Asha, who qualified in Jordan the same year.

According to the Muslim News, a website that follows the British Muslim community, another of those seized in Britain was also a doctor. It quoted a colleague of the man as saying he had come to Britain from Bangalore in India.

Britain remained on its maximum "critical" threat level today, after police yesterday cordoned off a hospital in Paisley, a town just outside Glasgow, and carried out several controlled detonations.

The hospital, the Royal Alexandra, is where Abdulla worked, staff said, and where he is also believed to be being treated for severe burns after taking part in the attack on Glasgow airport, when his vehicle was turned into a fireball.

Fearing further attacks, police banned cars and other vehicles from directly approaching airports and security measures were stepped up across the country as authorities kept the threat level at "critical", the highest rating.

The series of foiled and actual attacks pose a test for Prime Minister Gordon Brown, a Scot who replaced Tony Blair only last week and who has come under pressure from some quarters to change policy on Iraq and withdraw British troops.

Home Secretary (interior minister) Jacqui Smith said Britain was facing a "serious and sustained threat of terrorism" and urged the public to remain alert.

"Let us be clear: terrorists are criminals, whose victims come from all walks of life, communities and religious backgrounds," she said.

"Terrorists attack the values that are shared by all law-abiding citizens. It is through our unity that the terrorists will eventually be defeated."

In Amman, Jordan, the father of Asha described his son as a good Muslim, not a fanatic, and expressed incredulity that he could be involved in an al Qaeda-style bomb plot.

"I am sure Mohammed does not have any links of this nature because his history in Jordan and since he was a kid does not include any kind of activity of this nature," he said.

He said Mohammed and his wife were happy with their life in Britain and had had a son in the country about 18 months ago.

Six medicos among arrested | Herald Sun
 
Dad told me that one of the doctors w
who was responsible for the car bomb was from the North Staffs Hospital where I went to have an ear infection sorted out. I wonder if the doctor I saw was the one that was caught. It wouldn't surprise me much as he was horrible and unfeeling. So were some of the doctors from the North Staff who treated mum when she was dying from cancer.
 
Dad told me that one of the doctors w
who was responsible for the car bomb was from the North Staffs Hospital where I went to have an ear infection sorted out. I wonder if the doctor I saw was the one that was caught. It wouldn't surprise me much as he was horrible and unfeeling. So were some of the doctors from the North Staff who treated mum when she was dying from cancer.
Oh, my! :eek3:
 
Back
Top