Wednesday, January 12, 2011

London re-open the investigation bloody attacks in July 2005

 

British judge opened an investigation Monday expanded attacks, the seventh of July 2005 bombings, which killed 52 people in subway stations in the British capital.
Will be achieved Judge Heather's successful, whether it can Secret Service or the British police to prevent such attacks carried out by the British from other assets, are affected by the ideology of al Qaeda.
Judge expects to take about six months of investigations, to include verification of the speed of response confidentiality and security intelligence for the explosions that led to the panic and chaos in London during the morning rush hour.
The British security services had tracked two of the bombers of the transport network in London, and their cell leader Mohammed Sadiq Khan, a year before the attacks, according to a report published last year by the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament.
According to the report, which reportedly titled "Is it possible to prevent the attacks of 7 / 7", the internal security service MI5, Khan was considered "young criminals" and "false trivial," not linked by possible attacks within the United Kingdom at that time.
The interior minister said during the attacks, John Reid, said that the four suicide bombers, three of Pakistani descent and a fourth from Jamaica, were "Muslim extremists young was their motivation in the" anti-large by the lack of fairness of the West towards Muslims, "and" desire for martyrdom. "
One of the bombers knew the names of three of them, Shahzad Tanweer, 22, and Hasib Hussain, 18, both from the city of Leeds, and Mohammed Sadiq Khan, 30, from the city-bound, West Yorkshire.
After the bombings in July two weeks, there was a second attempt to blow up other trains and a bus, but did not explode as intended, was arrested and evacuated more than 12 people.
Referred to the attacks that hit the transport system in London, considered one of the most bloody aggressions exposed the British capital since World War II.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Type your comment in the briefing and without departing from the literature

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More