4 suspects in London bombings arrested

(AP)
Updated: 2007-05-09 21:10

LONDON - British police arrested four people Wednesday in connection with the suicide bombings that killed 52 bus and subway passengers in London in 2005.


Police stand outside a house in Leeds, England following raids on several houses in the area Wednesday May 9, 2007. British police arrested four people Wednesday in connection with the suicide bombings that killed 52 bus and subway passengers in London in 2005. All were arrested on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism and were being taken to London for interrogation, police said. [AP]

Two men and a woman were arrested in West Yorkshire, Metropolitan Police said, and West Midlands Police said a 22-year-old man was arrested in Birmingham.

All were arrested on suspicion of the commission, preparation or instigation of acts of terrorism and were being taken to London for interrogation, police said.

Searches were under way at two apartments in Birmingham, and at five addresses in West Yorkshire ¡ª two houses in Dewsbury, two houses in the Beeston neighborhood of Leeds and one house in Batley, police said.

Mohammed Sidique Khan, identified as one of the four London bombers, was a resident of Dewsbury and had grown up in Beeston.

The bombers struck on three subway trains and a double-decker bus on July 7, 2005 ¡ª the worst terrorist attack in British history.

In March, police arrested three people, all from the same West Yorkshire area as three of the four suicide bombers. They were charged on April 5 with conspiring with the attackers.

Those charged were Mohammed Shakil, of Beeston; Sadeer Saleem, of Beeston; and Waheed Ali, who recently lived in London but was formerly from Beeston.

London's Metropolitan Police said they were continuing a "painstaking investigation with a substantial amount of information being analyzed and investigated."

"As we have said previously, we are determined to follow the evidence wherever it takes us to identify any other person who may have been involved, in any way, in the terrorist attacks," the department said. "We need to know who else, apart from the bombers, knew what they were planning. Did anyone encourage them? Did anyone help them with money, or accommodation?"



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