Yikes!

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
Forum Member
Sep 16, 2003
17,897
63
0
Chicago
Man killed on subway not involved in blasts
July 23, 2005

BY JILL LAWLESS ASSOCIATED PRESS




LONDON-- The man shot and killed on a subway car by London police in front of horrified commuters had nothing to do with this month's bombings on the city's transit system, police said Saturday in expressing their regrets.

A day earlier, the police commissioner said the man was "directly linked" to Thursday's attacks, in which bombs on three subway trains and a bus failed to detonate properly. No one was injured.

"For somebody to lose their life in such circumstances is a tragedy and one that the Metropolitan Police Service regrets," a police spokesman said on customary condition of anonymity.

The man, whose identity has not been released, was shot Friday at a subway station in the south London neighborhood of Stockwell. Witnesses said the man appeared to be South Asian and was wearing a heavy padded coat when police chased him into a subway car, pinned him to the ground and shot him in the head and torso.

A police spokesman said on customary condition of anonymity that the man was unconnected to Thursday's incidents, in which bombs placed on three subway cars and a double-decker bus failed to detonate properly.

Later, a Metropolitan Police official said on condition of anonymity that the man was "not believed to be connected in any way to any of the London bombings." The official requested anonymity because no official announcement had been made concerning a link to the July 7 attacks that killed 56 people, including four attackers.

Hours after the man was killed, Metropolitan Police Commissioner Ian Blair said the shooting was "directly linked" to the investigations.

"The man who was shot was under police observation because he had emerged from a house that was itself under observation because it was linked to the investigation of yesterday's incidents," police said Friday.

"He was then followed by surveillance officers to the station. His clothing and his behavior at the station added to their suspicions."

Police investigating Thursday's attacks also said Saturday they had arrested a second man in the same south London neighborhood where the shooting occurred and another person was detained.

Thousands of officers fanned out in a huge manhunt amid hopes the publication of images of four suspected attackers would lead to their capture.

Security alerts kept the city of about 8 million on edge. Police briefly evacuated east London's Mile End subway station in one such incident and one witness reported the smell of something burning. Service was suspended on parts of two subway lines, but police said later the incident "turned out to be nothing."

The mourning continued, with hundreds packing Westminster Cathedral for the funeral Mass of Anthony Fatayi-Williams, a 26-year-old who was among the 52 people killed by four suicide bombers in the first wave of attacks on July 7.

"These present atrocities and Anthony's death have raised great emotions in us," Auxiliary Bishop of Westminster Alan Hopes told mourners. "We are angry, we are appalled and we are grieving. But as Christians we cannot yield to bitterness, we cannot yield to thoughts of revenge."

The Metropolitan Police said the second arrest late Friday was "in connection with our inquiries" into Thursday's attacks. The first suspect, whose identity also has not been released, was being questioned at a high-security London police station.

Police would not say whether the men arrested were among the four suspected of carrying bombs onto three subway trains and a bus Thursday. The bombs failed to detonate properly and no one was injured in the attacks, which echoed the much deadlier blasts two weeks earlier.

Police said they had a good response to Friday's release of the photos, taken from the British capital's ubiquitous closed-circuit surveillance cameras, which have proved a boon for investigators.

The closed-circuit TV images of the suspects stared from the front pages of British newspapers Saturday.

"Faces of the four bombers," said the Daily Telegraph.

"The Fugitives" said The Times.

The Daily Mail labeled them "Human Bombs."

One image shows a stocky man in a "New York" sweatshirt running through a station. Another depicts a man in a white baseball cap and a T-shirt adorned with palm trees. Two others are in dark clothes, slightly obscured by a poor camera angle.

A statement posted Friday on an Islamic Web site in the name of an al-Qaida-linked group claimed responsibility for Thursday's attacks.

Authorities, however, were skeptical. The group, Abu Hafs al Masri Brigades, has also claimed responsibility for the July 7 bombings-- as it did for the 2003 New York City blackout and many other events.

These have been days of high tension, disruption and fear on the London Underground. The union for subway and bus drivers said workers would be justified in staying away from work if the government fails to take more precautions to make the operators safe.

"I think they're going to strike again," commuter Warren West, 27, said of the bombers. "I think they're doing to London what's happening in Iraq."

Heavily armed officers patrolled with clear instructions to stop suicide bombers-- if necessary, with a shot to the head.

"If you are dealing with someone who might be a suicide bomber, if they remain conscious, they could trigger plastic explosives or whatever device is on them," Mayor Ken Livingstone. "Therefore, overwhelmingly in these circumstances, it is going to be a shoot-to-kill policy."
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
Forum Member
Sep 16, 2003
17,897
63
0
Chicago
"Witnesses said Menezes was wearing a heavy, padded coat when plainclothes police chased him into a subway car, pinned him to the ground and shot him in the head and torso." :shrug:





Family mourns Brazilian slain by London cops

July 25, 2005

BY ALAN CLENDENNING



GONZAGA, Brazil -- Jean Charles de Menezes couldn't get ahead at home, so he went to Britain to eke out a living as an electrician, hoping he could return to this rugged farming community with enough savings to become a cattle rancher.

The 27-year-old mistaken for a terrorist and shot dead last week by police on a London subway recently told family members he would have enough cash in a few years so he would never have to leave Brazil again.

But Sunday, his father, Matuzinhos Otone da Silva, cried in the family's small concrete home with red roof tiles at the end of a rutted dirt road. He was holding a recent photo of his bare-chested son smiling while lifting weights.

During a trip home last year, Menezes told family members and friends he was doing well, making good money and friends, and driving a relatively new pickup truck. His father, a bricklayer and lifelong Gonzaga resident, was concerned that London could be dangerous, but Menezes told him not to worry.

''They don't have violence,'' he recalled his son saying. ''It's good there; nobody walks around with a gun.''

Carried tools in knapsack



Menezes was killed Friday at the Stockwell subway station as police investigated the series of botched transit bombings a day earlier and the attacks of July 7 that killed 56 people.

Witnesses said Menezes was wearing a heavy, padded coat when plainclothes police chased him into a subway car, pinned him to the ground and shot him in the head and torso.

London Police Commissioner Ian Blair initially said Menezes was ''directly linked'' to the bombings investigations, but police then said Saturday he had no connection to the attacks. The shooting is being investigated.

Menezes, called ''Jim'' by his English friends, was thought to have been on his way to repair an alarm in the Wilsden Green neighborhood when he was shot, according to his cousin Alex Pereira, who lives in London. Menezes carried his electrical tools in a knapsack and often took the subway to work at sites around the city.

Menezes' mother, Maria, said her son's fascination with electricity began when he was small, perhaps because it did not reach their home amid groves of banana and orange trees about 12 miles from the town center. When Menezes was 10, he built a radio from scratch and decided he wanted to become an electrician, she said.

'How can they kill workers?'



''He was just so happy to see that it worked,'' she said, sobbing as relatives consoled her and urged her to keep faith in God.

Gonzaga is a town of 7,000 where restaurants close Sundays and residents drive their motorcycles around the town square for fun.

Like many Brazilians, Menezes moved to Sao Paulo, Brazil's largest city, as a young man seeking work. But after years of toiling as an electrician, he decided he would never be able to save enough in a country where tens of millions make only the monthly minimum wage of $125.

Making the decision to leave Brazil was not particularly difficult for Menezes because he was a ''Mineiro,'' or native of the central state of Minas Gerais, long known for exporting its residents in droves to the United States and Europe, where they seek to make enough money for a big nest egg to bring home.

Menezes' father learned of his son's death when a doctor from Gonzaga who treats him for high blood pressure showed up Saturday on a special visit, first giving him the treatment and then telling him to brace himself because his son was the Brazilian who had been killed.

His voice shaking, Menezes' father said he still does not know when his son's body will be sent home for burial. Relatives want the officers responsible for the death to be punished.

''We are just hoping that there will be justice,'' he said.

Added his wife: ''I'm totally outraged with the police. How can they kill workers?''

AP
 

djv

Registered User
Forum Member
Nov 4, 2000
13,817
17
0
SAD but you see what fear does. The terrorist win every time something like this happens. But I would guess 98/99% of us would have done same thing.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top