No, they could indicate that more attacks were planned...not necessarily
suicide...if the London bombings were suicide attacks and not screw-ups.
 
Bruce 


'Primed bombs' could point to more suicide cells

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=
356180
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id
=356180&in_page_id=1770> &in_page_id=1770
by STEPHEN WRIGHT, DAVID WILLIAMS and NEIL SEARS, Daily Mail 11:07am 18th
July 2005 The London suicide bombers had enough extra explosives in their
car to mount two further waves of terror attacks. 

Police are investigating the possibility that up to nine bombs, primed and
ready to use, could have been left in the hired Nissan Micra used by the
gang. 


Forensic experts will today continue to examine the remains of the car left
outside Luton station when the men caught a train to King's Cross.   

Bomb disposal teams carried out nine controlled explosions on the vehicle
using, it is believed, a procedure for dealing with bombs already fitted
with detonators. 

Scientific confirmation that the bombs were primed would underline fears
that a second or even third terror cell was planning another wave of
atrocities. 


A mysterious fifth person was seen with the four bombers and one theory is
that he had been due to return to the car and deliver its deadly cargo
elsewhere, but for some reason changed his mind. 


The bombers had bought a day-long parking ticket, displayed on the
windscreen. Three of the men had driven in the car from West Yorkshire. 


Bombs made in bath 


Their rucksack bombs are thought to have been made in the bath of a house in
Leeds. The gang could have placed their explosives in plastic containers
bought from a Leeds garden centre, police believe. 


The Daily Mail understands that a receipt found in the wreckage of one of
the blasts led officers directly to The Range Home and Leisure Garden Centre
at Tulip Retail Park. 


This modern industrial estate is a few hundred yards from Beeston, the
multicultural red-brick area of Leeds which increasingly looks like the
seedbed for the horrific terror attacks, with at least three of the suicide
bombers being at the centre of radical Islamic groups there. 


It appears that one of the men went to the Range store a couple of days
before the July 7 bombings and bought several large plastic containers for a
few pounds each. 


Police believe the 10lb of explosive, detonators, and any accompanying
shrapnel, would have been placed into each of the containers, which were
then placed into each of the bombers' rucksacks before they left on their
mission. 


Last night security sources stressed that police had still to prove
conclusively that several bombs had been left in the Nissan Micra hire car. 


It is unclear whether any traces of explosives were found in the red Fiat
left at the station by a fourth member of the cell, Jamaican-born Germaine
'Jamal' Lindsay. 


Spent time in Pakistan 


Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair has warned that further
terrorist attacks are likely and that other Al Qaeda trained Britons are at
large. 


And officials said yesterday that three of the bombers - Mohammed Sidique
Khan, 30, Shahzad Tanweer, 22, and Hasib Hussain, 18 - were all in Pakistan
at the same time earlier this year. 


It emerged that Khan and Tanweer both spent several weeks in Pakistan and
that in February Tanweer met with a leader of the outlawed Jaish-e-Muhammad,
which has links to Al Qaeda and a wave of suicide bombings. 


More than a dozen arrests were made in Pakistan yesterday by police probing
possible links to the London bombings. 


Pakistan's officials have also been sent a list of 12 Britons of Pakistani
origin who have vanished in recent years with a request for any available
information. Anti-terror investigators are carrying out an exhaustive trawl
of telephone numbers used by the gang - and calls they received - in the
hope of hunting down accomplices. 


MI5 is reviewing all its Islamist terror investigations since 2000. 


Officials have confirmed that Khan, a special needs teacher of Dewsbury, had
been the subject of a 'routine threat assessment' by MI5 after his name
cropped up in an investigation last year into a foiled bomb plot. He is said
to have met one of the men linked to that plot but a 'quick assessment' at
the time judged he was 'on the periphery' and posed no threat. 


The decision not to follow up the link, however weak, and not to monitor a
low-level Al Qaeda suspect who entered Britain through Felixstowe and left
from Heathrow two weeks later, shortly before the attack, are likely to
feature in any review of intelligence failures leading to the bombings on
three Tube trains and a bus. 


Biochemist quizzed 


The Egyptian biochemist linked to the bombers was arrested for suspected
terrorism in 1997, it is claimed. 


Magdy Al Nashar, 33, was seized by Egyptian police after the massacre of 58
tourists in Luxor, according to neighbours of his home in Cairo. 


He was quizzed by Egyptian security services for two weeks but released
without charge. 


The chemistry PhD student is being questioned by Scotland Yard detectives at
the headquarters of the Egyptian security services in Cairo. 


He helped Jamal Lindsay rent a flat in Leeds last month but returned to
Egypt a week before the attacks. 


One theory is that Al Nashar provided the expertise in making the bombs. 


But he has denied playing any part in the atrocities, telling police he
arrived in Egypt for a holiday on June 30. His family claim that Al Nashar,
a divorcee, returned to look for a new wife. 


This story first appeared in the
<http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/std/dm_logosmall.gif> . 

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