LONDON BOMBING - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Blair rejects calls for probe into bombings |
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by James Blitz and Jimmy Burns Financial Times Entered into the database on Sunday, July 10th, 2005 @ 21:41:35 MST |
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As police and security services on Sunday continued searching for the bombers
- thought to be Islamist terrorists - Downing Street said the prime minister
believed an inquiry now into the outrage which killed at least 49 people would
be a "ludicrous diversion." Instead, in a statement to the Commons on Monday following last week's Group
of Eight summit, Mr Blair is expected to focus on the direction the government
must take to ensure future terrorism is defeated. In particular, the prime minister believes there must be far greater co-operation
among European Union governments in the fight against terrorism - a view Charles
Clarke, the home secretary, is expected to drive home at an emergency meeting
of EU interior ministers this week. He is expected to tell his counterparts governments must ensure operators keep
data on telephone and internet exchanges for up to a year. He also indicated on Sunday that he would consider granting further "control
orders" if he thought they were necessary. Mr Clarke said he was "very optimistic indeed" that last Thursday's
bombers would be tracked down. But he feared further attacks could take place
until that happened. "That is why the number one priority has to be the
catching of the perpetrators." Police continued to sift through the debris from Thursday's four explosions
- three in the London Underground and one on a bus - and to examine witness
accounts and intelligence as part of their hunt for the bombers. But police chiefs indicated that had yet to establish the identity or the whereabouts
of the terrorists they suspect belong to an extremist Islamist cell in sympathy
with the aims of Al-Qaeda. Tension several cities remained high over the weekend. Police said they had
arrested, under prevention of terrorism laws, three British nationals on an
inward flight at Heathrow early on Sunday but insisted that any link with last
Thursday's bombings was speculative. The three were expected to be released
later on Sunday night, according to police sources. But the arrests, the dozens of bomb alerts in the English capital and an evacuation
in the Birmingam city centre over the weekend reflect the nervousness of both
police and the general public at the prospect that the bombers were still at
large and capable of striking again. The police also revealed that there had been a few cases of attacks on British
Muslims in the wake of the bombings - including one in which an individual was
"seriously injured." The revelation came as some government officials expressed irritation that
an article in a Sunday newspaper by Sir John Stevens, the former Metropolitan
Police commissioner, might stir up racial tensions. He said the bombers were
"almost certainly" British - with many more born and bred here willing
to attack |