Right on Madd Maxx. They're doing this to rattle the people so
they can impliment more NWO goals.

To prevent this, log onto my site and read to your heart's content.

In peace and solidarity,

Arlene Johnson
Publisher/Author
http://www.truedemocracy.net the home of The Journal of History (La verdad 
sobre la democracia)
Click on the icon that says Magazine.
Password for 2005 editions: UN
No password is needed to access the editions dated 2001 - 2004.
Be sure to click on the icon that says Boycotts We Support too. You'll be glad 
you did.

-----Original Message-----
From: Max Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Jul 21, 2005 9:41 PM
To: "[Cia-Drugs]" <cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: "[DrugWar]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [cia-drugs] OT? Four blasts shake London in chilling replay - New York 
to start random searches

"New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said police will begin conducting 
random searches of packages and backpacks carried by people entering the 
city?s subway,"

Gotta start getting the public used to random searches somewhere huh?

Madd Maxx-


Four blasts shake London in chilling replay
*3 subway stations and bus hit; just one injury reported this time*

MSNBC News Services
Updated: 3:14 p.m. ET July 21, 2005

LONDON - Explosions struck the London Underground and a bus at midday 
Thursday in a chilling but far less bloody replay of the suicide 
bombings that killed 56 people two weeks ago.

Only one person was reported injured in the nearly simultaneous 
lunch-hour blasts, which shocked and disrupted the capital and were 
hauntingly similar to the July 7 bombings by four attackers.

Police that forensic evidence collected from the crime scenes could 
provide a ?significant break? in the latest attacks.

?Clearly, the intention must have been to kill,? Metropolitan Police 
Commissioner Ian Blair told a news conference. ?You don?t do this with 
any other intention.?

The BBC reported that two people had been arrested, but Blair said those 
arrests were not connected to Thursday's attacks.

He also said it was not clear if the two sets of attacks were connected.

Panicked and screaming commuters fled the three affected Underground 
stations, sometimes leaving behind their shoes. Firefighters and police 
with bomb-sniffing dogs sealed off nearby city blocks and evacuated rows 
of restaurants, pubs and offices.

*Blair appeals for calm
*Prime Minister Tony Blair appealed for calm.

?We can?t minimize incidents such as this,? he said at a joint news 
conference with the Australian prime minister at No. 10 Downing St. 
?They?re done to scare people, to frighten them and make them worried.?

He held an emergency Cabinet meeting but said no policy decisions were made.

Police Chief Blair called the blasts ?a very serious incident.?

?We know that we have four explosions or attempts of explosions, and it 
is still pretty unclear as to what has happened,? he said outside 
Scotland Yard.

?At the moment the casualty numbers appear to be very low ... the bombs 
appear to be smaller? than those detonated July 7, he said. He added 
later that not all the bombs went off.

*

New York to start random searches
*President Bush was briefed on the explosions and said the terrorists 
?understand when they kill in cold blood it ends up on our TV screens 
and they?re trying to shake our will. And they?re trying to create 
vacuums in which their ideology can move.?

U.S. mass transit systems remain on code orange, or high alert, since 
the London bombings two weeks ago, but the rest of the country is at 
yellow, signifying an elevated risk.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said police will begin conducting 
random searches of packages and backpacks carried by people entering the 
city?s subway, which carries about 4.5 million passengers on the average 
weekday. Officials would not immediately say how frequently the checks 
would occur.

London Transport spokesman Steve Taylor told The Associated Press that 
it would be impractical to check bags, or to install airport-style metal 
detectors and X-ray machines in a subway network that carries 3 million 
passengers a day, or a bus system that carries some 6 million daily.

*Pieces of the puzzle
*An armed police unit entered University College hospital shortly after 
an injured person was carried in, Britain?s Press Association reported.

Sky News TV reported that police were searching for a man with a blue 
shirt with wires protruding. Officers asked employees to look for a 
black or Asian male about 6-foot-2.

The attacks, which targeted trains near the Warren Street, Oval and 
Shepherd?s Bush stations, did not shut down the subway system, only 
three of its lines. The double-decker bus had its windows blown out on 
Hackney Road in east London.

Witnesses told The Associated Press they did not hear a bang but smelled 
something similar to an electrical fire at the Warren Street station.

Police in chemical protection suits were at the Warren Street station, 
but no chemical agents were found.

Stagecoach, the company that operates the stricken bus, said the driver 
heard a bang and went upstairs, where he found the windows blown out. 
The company said the bus was structurally intact and there were no 
injuries.

*Parallels with July 7*
The incidents paralleled the July 7 blasts, which involved explosions at 
three Underground stations simultaneously starting at 8:51 a.m., 
followed quickly by a bomb going off on a bus. Those bombings, during 
the morning rush hour, also occurred in the center of London, hitting 
the Underground from various directions.

Thursday?s incidents, however, were more spread out.

Emergency teams were sent to all three stations after the incidents, 
which began at 12:38 p.m.

?People were panicking. But very fortunately the train was only 15 
seconds from the station,? witness Ivan McCracken told Sky news.

McCracken said another passenger at Warren Street told him he saw a 
backpack explode. The July 7 bombs were carried in backpacks, police said.

*'As if something had gone wrong'*
McCracken said he smelled smoke, and people were panicking and coming 
into his carriage. He said he spoke to an Italian man who was comforting 
a woman after the evacuation.

?He said that a man was carrying a rucksack and the rucksack suddenly 
exploded. It was a minor explosion but enough to blow open the 
rucksack,? McCracken said. ?The man then made an exclamation as if 
something had gone wrong. At that point everyone rushed from the carriage.?

Losiane Mohellavi, 35, who was evacuated at Warren Street, said, ?I was 
in the carriage and we smelled smoke ? it was like something was 
burning. Everyone was panicked and people were screaming. We had to pull 
the alarm. I am still shaking.?

The U.S. Embassy was closed to visitors about two hours after the blasts 
as a precaution, but embassy staff continued working, said spokeswoman 
Susan Domowitz.

*Pakistan link in 7-7 blasts*
The explosions came as Pakistani intelligence officials said authorities 
are seeking the former aide of a radical cleric in Britain in connection 
with the July 7 bombings.

The officials said British investigators asked Pakistani authorities to 
search for Haroon Rashid Aswat, who reportedly had been in close contact 
with the suicide bombers just before the July 7 attacks.

Aswat, 31, was of Indian origin and may not be in Pakistan, according to 
two intelligence officials in Islamabad and one in Lahore, all speaking 
on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to talk to the 
media and because of the sensitivity of the investigation.

Aswat reportedly was once an associate of Abu Hamza al-Masri, the 
radical imam who is awaiting trial in Britain on charges of incitement 
to murder. Al-Masri also is wanted in the United States on charges of 
trying to establish a terrorist training camp in Bly, Ore.; involvement 
in hostage-taking in Yemen; and funding terror training in Afghanistan.

*Phone calls and visits with bombers
*Quoting unidentified intelligence sources, The Times of London said 
Aswat visited the hometowns of all four London bombers and selected 
their targets. It also reported there had been up to 20 phone calls 
between Aswat and two of the bombers in the days before the attacks.

Aswat?s relatives in Batley, near the northern English town of Leeds, 
which was home to two of the July 7 suicide bombers, said they had not 
heard from him for many years.

?He has not lived at this house and we have not had contact with him for 
many years,? said his father, Rashid, who asked for his family to be 
left in peace. ?There is no story that we can provide.?

Authorities are investigating whether the London bombing suspects, three 
of whom were of Pakistani origin and traveled to Pakistan last year, 
received training or other assistance from militants in that country.

One of the July 7 bombers, Shahzad Tanweer, 22, is suspected of visiting 
a madrassa linked with militants in Lahore which has become a focus of 
the inquiry.

According to a report in a Pakistani newspaper, Tanweer revered Osama 
bin Laden. The English-language Dawn newspaper said Tanweer visited 
relatives in November in a farming village near Faisalabad in eastern 
Pakistan. During his stay, he was visited by another bombing suspect, 
Mohammed Sidique Khan, 30, Tanweer?s uncle told the newspaper.

Pakistan has pledged to curb religious extremism amid international 
concerns that Islamic schools, or madrassas, are promoting extremism.

//© 2005 MSNBC Interactive//

© 2005 MSNBC.com

URL: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8655541/

-- 
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