Obviously, with everyone preoccupied with the Rice Testimony News,
the news around the world on the terror front is taking back seat.
In England, 8 men were arrested with a ton of fertilizer (that can be used for explosives) around London
In the Phillipines, 4 men were arrested for the same reason with the same materials
And now for some real news
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And now for some real news
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- southerngale
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Terror bombs seized
By Justin Davenport and Hugh Dougherty, Evening Standard
An al Qaeda plot to blast London was dramatically foiled by police today.
Seven hundred police swooped in a series of 6am raids in the capital and the Home Counties. They found half a tonne of fertiliser explosives - enough for a series of terror "spectaculars".
The terrorist suspects arrested by police are believed to have chosen "soft targets" for bombings including pubs and clubs. One of the suspects being held had a job at Gatwick Airport, immediately raising concerns over airlines and passengers.
A total of eight men - all of them British citizens of Pakistani descent, three of them teenagers - were arrested in the operation, with police from five forces searching a total of 24 addresses across London and the South-East.
The ammonium nitrate explosives were discovered in a self-storage warehouse in Hanwell, west London and have now been made safe. They are the same explosives that al Qaeda used in attacks in Bali, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
The raids came only two weeks after Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens warned that an attack on London was "inevitable" and that the targets could include pubs, clubs and shopping centres.
Scotland Yard deputy assistant commissioner Peter Clarke said today: "I must stress the threat from terrorism is very real and the public must remain watchful and alert."
http://www.thisislondon.com/til/jsp/modules/Article/print.jsp?itemId=9969473
By Justin Davenport and Hugh Dougherty, Evening Standard
An al Qaeda plot to blast London was dramatically foiled by police today.
Seven hundred police swooped in a series of 6am raids in the capital and the Home Counties. They found half a tonne of fertiliser explosives - enough for a series of terror "spectaculars".
The terrorist suspects arrested by police are believed to have chosen "soft targets" for bombings including pubs and clubs. One of the suspects being held had a job at Gatwick Airport, immediately raising concerns over airlines and passengers.
A total of eight men - all of them British citizens of Pakistani descent, three of them teenagers - were arrested in the operation, with police from five forces searching a total of 24 addresses across London and the South-East.
The ammonium nitrate explosives were discovered in a self-storage warehouse in Hanwell, west London and have now been made safe. They are the same explosives that al Qaeda used in attacks in Bali, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
The raids came only two weeks after Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens warned that an attack on London was "inevitable" and that the targets could include pubs, clubs and shopping centres.
Scotland Yard deputy assistant commissioner Peter Clarke said today: "I must stress the threat from terrorism is very real and the public must remain watchful and alert."
http://www.thisislondon.com/til/jsp/modules/Article/print.jsp?itemId=9969473
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- blizzard
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Although this may have been terrorist related, utilizing fertilizer bombs is a time consuming task. And has a higher liklihood of being detected. (and it was). I was trained in this type of explosive making while I was in the US Army, and it is very cumbersome.
I am glad that they caught them, and if they continue to try to use this method, they will continue to be caught. IMO
I am glad that they caught them, and if they continue to try to use this method, they will continue to be caught. IMO
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