http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/international/AP-Britain-
Bombings.html


5th Man in Britain Attacks May Be at Large 

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: July 26, 2005
Filed at 5:46 a.m. ET

LONDON (AP) -- British police Monday identified two of four men 
believed responsible for last week's botched transit bombings and 
said an explosive found in a park was like those used in the 
attempted attacks, raising fears a fifth bomber was on the loose.
London's police chief said the force was ''racing against time'' to 
find the bombers, who fled three subway trains and a bus when their 
devices failed to fully detonate. Those bombs and the one found 
abandoned Saturday all were made using clear plastic food-storage 
containers put into dark-colored bags or backpacks.

At a televised press conference, Peter Clarke, head of the 
Metropolitan Police anti-terrorist squad, held up one of the white-
lidded, 1.65-gallon containers -- called a Delta 6250 -- and urged 
any shopkeeper who had sold five or more of them to contact police.
Earlier, Prime Minister Tony Blair apologized for the killing of a 
Brazilian electrician mistaken for a terrorist as officials 
confirmed that undercover police shot him eight times -- one in the 
shoulder, seven in the head. Blair also urged Britons to come forth 
with information on the fugitive bombers.
Police identified two of the suspects as Yasin Hassan Omar, 24, and 
Muktar Said Ibrahim, 27, also known as Muktar Mohammed Said, but did 
not give their nationalities.

Authorities also released new closed-circuit images of the four 
suspects and gave details of their movements, recounting how one 
bolted from a subway station pursued by passengers, while another 
jumped through a subway window and fled down the tracks.
Armed officers raided a London apartment that Said -- suspected of 
trying to bomb a bus in east London on Thursday -- was believed to 
have visited recently. Forensic officers in white overalls searched 
the apartment in Curtis House, a concrete high-rise in the city's 
northern suburbs.

Resident Sammy Jones, 33, said she thought she recognized a man who 
visited the building as Said. She said he stayed with an African 
named George who lived in a ninth-floor apartment. Jones said two 
men of Somali appearance also visited the apartment.
''They used to come in at all hours of the night,'' she said.
She said a few weeks earlier she had seen George and the man she 
thought was Said filling an elevator with small brown cardboard 
boxes. When she asked what was in them, they replied ''wallpaper 
stripper.''
Metropolitan Police also said Monday they had arrested two people on 
suspicion of terrorism in the area but not at the raided address. 
Three other suspects are already being questioned at a high-security 
London police station ''on suspicion of the commission, instigation 
or preparation of acts of terrorism'' in connection with the July 21 
attacks.

On Sunday, police destroyed a package found by a passerby in bushes 
in a west London park not far from the scene of the attempted 
bombing at Shepherd's Bush station. Clarke said forensic examination 
showed ''clear similarities'' between the device and the four bombs 
found Thursday.

Those attacks came two weeks after bombings that killed 52 people 
and four suspected suicide bombers on three subway trains and a 
double-decker bus.
At the press conference, Clarke described how the four bombers fled 
when they realized they had failed.
At Oval station in south London, the suspect was ''chased from the 
station by extraordinarily brave members of the public who tried to 
detain him.'' Giving them the slip, the man ran into the Brixton 
neighborhood, where police later found his ''New York'' sweatshirt.
At Shepherd's Bush, the suspect -- Omar -- fled the train, probably 
by jumping through a window and running along the tracks, Clarke 
said.
Police Commissioner Ian Blair said police were mounting ''an 
absolutely brilliant operation, and it is, of course, racing against 
time.'' But as the investigation rolled on, police faced growing 
criticism over the killing of the unarmed Brazilian mistaken for a 
potential bomber.
The family of Jean Charles de Menezes, 27, shot dead Friday inside a 
subway carriage in front of horrified passengers, said they were 
considering legal action against the police.
''They have to pay for that in many ways, because if they do not, 
they are going to kill many people,'' the victim's cousin, Alex 
Pereira, told British Broadcasting Corp. television.
As a coroner's inquest opened Monday into the shooting, Blair 
expressed ''sorrow and deep sympathy'' over the death but said 
police were working ''in very, very difficult circumstances.''
''Had the circumstances been different and had this turned out to be 
a terrorist, and they had failed to take that action, they would 
have been criticized the other way,'' the prime minister said.
The police commissioner has indicated he believed al-Qaida-linked 
terrorists were involved in both the July 7 and July 21 attacks. 
Asked if the attacks were connected, he said: ''We have no proof 
that they are linked, but clearly there is a pattern here.''
Police were reportedly investigating whether some of the July 21 
suspects may have visited the same Welsh whitewater rafting center 
as two of the July 7 suicide bombers, Mohammed Sidique Khan and 
Shahzad Tanweer.
The men went rafting there June 4, according to the National 
Whitewater Center. Police have refused to comment on media reports 
that a rafting center brochure was found in the explosives-laden 
knapsack found on a bus July 21.
Center director Paul O'Sullivan told The Associated Press the two 
identified July 21 suspects were not registered on the same rafting 
trip as the July 7 suspects.
------
Associated Press writer Sarah Blaskovich contributed this report 
from London.






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