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Three arrested under UK prevention of terrorism act

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http://today.reuters.com/News/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2005-07-10T145743Z_01_N1081345_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-SECURITY-BRITAIN-DC.XML

UK police make three anti-terrorism arrests
Sun Jul 10, 2005 10:58 AM ET

By Gideon Long

LONDON (Reuters) - British police arrested three terrorist suspects on Sunday at Heathrow airport but said they had no reason so far to link them to last week's suspected al Qaeda bombings in London.

"Three people have been arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act at Heathrow airport," Scotland Yard Deputy Assistant Commissioner Brian Paddick told a news conference.

The arrests were made early on Sunday but he did not say whether the suspects were entering or leaving the country.

Paddick said it would be "pure speculation" to link them to last Thursday's bombings on three underground trains and a bus, from which police have recovered 49 bodies and are still retrieving more from a tunnel below King's Cross station.

He later told Sky television: "My understanding is these are reasonably routine arrests under the Prevention of Terrorism Act ... there is no connection that we know of at this stage."

Britain has detained more than 700 people under anti-terrorism laws since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. Of these, around 120 have been charged with terrorism offences and another 135 charged under other legislation.

Police have so far not reported any arrests directly linked to deadliest militant attack on its capital, which the government says bear the hallmark of the al Qaeda network that carried out the Sept. 11 attacks.

They have been at pains to stress the inquiry will require slow and meticulous work, including the gathering of forensic evidence from the four bomb sites, three of which are in subway tunnels.


HUNDREDS OF CALLS

Paddick said police had received important information from members of the public, who had placed 1,700 calls to a special investigation hotline.

"A considerable number of these calls are proving to be very, very valuable to us," he said.

Police say the three subway bombs went off almost simultaneously, making it more likely they were detonated by timers, rather than suicide bombers. That means the bombers may still be at large and could strike again, they said.

A huge overnight security alert in Britain's second city of Birmingham kept Britons on edge on Sunday.

Police evacuated 20,000 people from the city center on Saturday night and carried out four controlled explosions on a bus. They found no bombs but said the drastic measures were fully justified.

"The threat that we responded to yesterday was very specific," West Midlands police chief constable Paul Scott-Lee told a news conference.

"It was specific about the time and also the locations ... The people of Birmingham were in danger last night."

In London, anxious relatives continued to scour hospitals in search of loved ones missing since Thursday's blasts -- the worst peacetime attacks on the British capital.

Walls, bus stops and telephone boxes close to King's Cross station, scene of the worst blast, were covered with photographs of missing people and appeals for information about them.

Wellwishers have left hundreds of bouquets of flowers outside the station, many accompanied by messages testifying to London's multi-ethnic and multinational mix.

"Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist. We are all Londoners," read one message scrawled on a Union Jack flag.

"Our prayers are with you. Keep the faith. From all South Africans," read another written on that nation's flag.

In Rome, Pope Benedict lamented what he termed "revolting terrorist acts" and prayed for the dead and the 700 injured.



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Three arrested under UK prevention of terrorism act

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