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thedrifter
07-13-05, 09:07 AM
4 bomb suspects born in Britain
By Paul Martin
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
July 13, 2005

LONDON -- Police said yesterday they had identified four British-born men, all thought to be of Pakistani origin, as the perpetrators of last week's terror outrage in London.
All four are thought to have died in the attacks, officials said, while declining to describe them as "suicide bombers." Another man was in custody after a search of the bombing suspects' homes in the northern city of Leeds.

If confirmed as suicide bombings, the attacks would be the first of their kind in Western Europe.

Other officials said on the condition of anonymity that police still are searching airline records based on the suspicion that the mastermind fled Britain before the bombings, which killed at least 52 persons.

Authorities said they think more members of the cell remain at large and could be primed for another terrorist strike.

At dawn yesterday, police and army units raided homes where the bombing suspects had lived in or around Leeds, a stronghold of Pakistani Muslims. The man arrested there was said to be a close relative of one of the bombing suspects.
Police evacuated more than 500 people from neighboring homes after finding bomb-making materials inside one house, security sources said.

They also said "significant" quantities of explosives had been found in a rental car left at a railroad station in Luton, from where the suspects boarded a train to London.

The four men were videotaped on closed-circuit television cameras at King's Cross station 20 minutes before bombs exploded on three subway trains, counterterrorism police Chief Peter Clarke said at a press conference yesterday.

Passengers arriving at King's Cross on trains from the north can descend directly from the station into the subway system.

Mr. Clarke also revealed that police found personal documents bearing the names of three of the four men close to subway seats where bombs exploded. A fourth bomb exploded about 45 minutes later on a bus.

Parents of the man suspected in the bus bombing reported him missing later that day. Police surmised that he carried the bomb onto the bus after he failed to board a subway train, perhaps because the system had already been shut down by the other attacks.

In Leeds, neighbors of one of the suspects expressed the community's shock.

"They were a nice family bringing their kids up like all families bring their kids up," one said.

Meanwhile, friends and relatives were rapidly giving up hope yesterday of finding any more survivors as authorities formally identified more of the dead, Associated Press reported.

"We're waiting to hear what we already know in our hearts to be fact," said the Rev. Tim Daplyn, whose 26-year-old niece, Elizabeth, hasn't been heard from since Thursday's bombings. 'The tense of the language we are using to describe her has changed to 'was' rather than 'is.'?"

Although the family of Anthony Fatayi-Williams, 26, now presumes he was among the 13 persons killed in the bus attack, "we just cannot accept what has happened," a friend, Shiyan Smith, said yesterday as he placed flowers on the steps of a nearby church.

Others refused to believe the worst.

"We're not giving up hope," said Richard Deer, whose Polish-born girlfriend, Karolina Gluck, 29, was thought to have been traveling on the Piccadilly Line between King's Cross and Russell Square -- the site of the worst of the blasts, which killed at least 21 persons.

"She's a beautiful woman, and we're asking why," Mr. Deer said.

Police said they had positively identified the body of one of the train bombers but had extracted no clues from the body of another, either because it was destroyed or remained trapped within the wreckage 15 stories below King's Cross station. Bodies are still being recovered from that site.

Reporters in Northern England identified one of the suspects as Shehzad Tanweer, 22, who lived in a large, neat and well-kept family home in Leeds. Another suspect was said by local reporters to be Hasib Hussein, 18, who lived with his parents in Leeds.

"This is a horrifying development," said one of the country's foremost moderate Muslim leaders, Zaki Badawi. "Suicide bombings are far more dangerous than those who want to kill without themselves being killed. Now no city in Britain is safe."

One of the terrorist bodies found by police apparently had been decapitated. Security sources said that if this is confirmed, it would point to the bomber having worn a suicide vest or having clutched his bomb close to his torso, matching a pattern commonly seen in suicide bombings in Israel and Iraq.

British police were calling for increased authority to track down e-mail -- by requiring Internet cafes to store electronic communications and cell phone operators to record all calls.
"We have to be able to follow [these communications] back," said Ian Blair, the newly appointed chief of the Metropolitan Police.

• This article is based in part on wire service reports.

Ellie

thedrifter
07-13-05, 12:53 PM
Profile: the Leeds bombers
By Sam Knight, Times Online
Three of the four bombers came from the Beeston area of Leeds, while the fourth, as yet unnamed, bomber is also believed to have come from the city

Mohammed Sadique Khan

Bombed the Circle Line train at Edgware Road

Khan, 30, the eldest of the known bombers, was the married father of an eight-month-old baby and lived in Dewsbury in West Yorkshire.

He is thought to have been on Pakistani origin and to have lived in Beeston until five months ago, when he moved with his wife Hasina to Lees Holm in Dewsbury. Yesterday his home was raided by police. Neighbours said he worked with disabled children while his wife was involved in education.

A neighbour, Sara Aziz, 28, said: "They seemed a right quiet couple. He goes to the gym. The reason I say that is because I’ve seen him carrying a bag over his shoulders some mornings. I saw him last week."

Shehzad Tanweer

Bombed the Circle Line train at Aldgate

Tanweer, 22, lived at Colwyn Road, Leeds, and was known as a friendly, respected young man. He was a keen cricketer and worked occasionally for his father, the owner of South Leeds Fisheries, a well known chip shop in Beeston.

He reportedly attended Wortley High School before moving on to Leeds Metropolitan University to study sports science.

Tanweer's family originally came from Faisalabad in Pakistan, although he was born in Bradford on December 15 1982. He grew up with his brother and two sisters in Yorkshire but according to his uncle, Mohamed Azfal, spent six months in Pakistan and Afghanistan last year

Detectives believe that Tanweer hired a Nissan Micra in Leeds and drove to Luton last Wednesday, where he and met the other three bombers

Hasib Mir Hussain

Bombed the Number 30 bus that exploded in Tavistock Square

The youngest of the bombers, Hussain, 19, lived in the Holbeck suburb of Leeds and reportedly attended Matthew Murray High School. His home in Colenso Mount was raided yesterday.

Hussain was known as an outgoing, gregarious boy who drank and dated girls, until he visited Pakistan two years ago. On his return his friends found he had become deeply religious.

It was Hussain's body, found on the bus with the distinctive decapitation injuries of a suicide bomber, which led investigators to Leeds. Police identified him quickly from his credit cards, and from a phone call from his distraught mother who reported him missing at 10:20pm on the evening of the bombings.

Hussain's mother described the clothes he was wearing, which allowed investigators to spot him on CCTV footage taken from King's Cross, standing and talking to three other men with rucksacks.

A neighbour in Leeds who asked not to be named, said: "The lad was born here. He lived here all his life. They were very, very nice people. We all knew them but I wouldn’t say I knew them well. They were just a very nice family."

The Fourth Man

Bombed the Picadilly Line train at King's Cross

Named locally as Eliaz or Ejaz Fiaz, 30, nicknamed 'Jacksey', although police have yet to confirm his identity. He is thought to have lived in a house in Dewsbury, where the plotters may have held meetings.

On the eve of the attacks, he met the other three men in Luton, where they spent the night before taking a Thameslink train to King's Cross.

Ellie