Terror cell ‘capable of further attacks’
The News Review:
- Terror cell ‘capable of further attacks’
- Feature: Chinese farmers expect more help, less discrimination from…
- London bombs ‘were first British suicide attacks’
- Middle East Online
Terror cell ‘capable of further attacks’
Guardian Unlimited – Jul 12, 2005
A senior police officer warned that another attack could be imminent and anti-terrorism officials pointed to the possibility of future bombings. “It is more difficult to detect home-grown groups,” said one anti-terrorism official. “They are less conspicuous and they don’t move around. “The task of the security and intelligence agencies was made more difficult, officials said, because local cells do not need to take instructions from abroad. But they said they had no concrete evidence to back up their suspicions. “People are radicalised and take it on themselves [to carry out terrorist attacks],” a senior anti-terrorism official said…
The commissioner of police for the City of London, James Hart, said there was a strong possibility of another attack. Mr Hart said: “We can’t possibly assume that what happened on Thursday was the last of these events. “In a bid to get closer to potential home-grown terrorists, newly recruited police officers are being encouraged to plan a terrorist attack. The course is designed by Hertfordshire police. About this article Close Terror cell ‘capable of further attacks’ This article appeared in.
Feature: Chinese farmers expect more help, less discrimination from…
People's Daily Online – Jul 12, 2005
When asked about his opinion on the meeting, Jiang says,” I don’t care what they will debate, as the topics they will discuss has nothing to do with me. “But the meeting is a great concern to Zheng Quanren, another farmer at Caijia Village of Shahezhen in Dalian. Zheng, 51, now earns hundreds of thousands of yuan a year from selling home-grown vegetables, such as cabbage, shallot and brocoli, to.
London bombs ‘were first British suicide attacks’
Guardian Unlimited – Jul 12, 2005
Police said they believed four men who arrived at King’s Cross last Thursday morning on a train from Leeds were behind the terrorist bomb attack that killed at least 52 people on three tube trains and one bus. At least three of the bombers are believed to have been British males of Pakistani origin who lived in West Yorkshire. Detectives are still unsure about the identity of the fourth bomber. The bus bomber is believed to be dead, and police said there was “strong forensic and other evidence” a second bomber died at Aldgate.
Middle East Online
Middle East Online – Jul 12, 2005
“London is a capital of the Muslim world. It is probably the only city in the world where the various parts of the Islamic world interact,” Shehadi said. It was important to find out if the bombers were “home-grown”, as believed by Sir John Stevens, the newly-retired head of London’s Metropolitan Police. Stevens said at the weekend he believed that “up to 3,000 British-born or British-based people have passed through Osama bin Laden’s training camps over the years”. For Shehadi, “if the London bombers arrived from outside Britain then it was an immigration issue. If it was a sleeper cell then it was an intelligence breakdown. “And if they were born and bred here then it is a societal breakdown which hits at the heart of co-existence…
“And if they were born and bred here then it is a societal breakdown which hits at the heart of co-existence. Overall, it was too early to determine if the London bombers had interacted closely or not with their Madrid counterparts, or whether they were British-based or trained in Afghanistan or Iraq, Wilkinson said. “I think there is a possible combination of home-grown people with experts who have come in and brought their expertise with them,” he said. “These people have never regarded Europe as off-limits. They are bitterly opposed to the values we stand for as allies of the United States, which they love to hate.