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| Two policemen walk pass the blanked-off region of Beeston in Leeds, a southern Britain town July 14, 2005.(Xinhua photo) |
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A policeman stands guard in the blanked-off area of Beeston in Leeds, a southern Britain town July 15, 2005. (Xinhua
photo) |
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| An officer working with a bomb disposal
robot opens up a property on Lodge Lane, Beeston, Leeds, northern England,
Thursday July 14, 2005. |
BEIJING, July 15 --British and FBI officials investigating
the London terror attacks have focused on an Egyptian-born chemist who studied
in the United States and an 18-year-old Briton of Pakistani descent believed to
have set off the bomb aboard a red double-decker bus.
Security forces in camouflage searched the Beeston
area of the northern city of Leeds as police tried to crack the network thought
to have given the dead suspects planning, logistical and bomb-making support.
News reports said British authorities were seeking a
Pakistani Briton with possible ties to al-Qaida followers in the US.
They said he may have organized the attacks and
chosen the targets, leaving Britain the day before the July 7 bombings.
FBI agents in Raleigh, N.C., joined the search for
the chemist, Magdy Asi el-Nashar, a 33-year-old former North Carolina State
University graduate student. The doors were locked Thursday at the building at
Leeds University where he recently taught chemistry.
And in a further international development in the
inquiry, Jamaica's government said it was investigating a Jamaican-born Briton
as one of the bombers.
Britain paid tribute Thursday to those killed in the
attacks with two minutes of silence.
Queen Elizabeth II stood motionless outside
Buckingham Palace and a crowd, many wiping away tears and bowing their heads,
filled Trafalgar Square.
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com) |