Taylor
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2004
- Messages
- 1,630
- Reaction score
- 4
Source
NOTE: This is a developing story and details will be added as they become available.
LONDON - Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and tore open a double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday, causing at least two deaths and 300 injuries in what Prime Minister Tony Blair said was a "barbaric" terrorist attack timed to disrupt the Group of Eight summit.
The explosions came a day after London was awarded the 2012 Olympics and as the G-8 summit was getting under way in Scotland.
"We are concerned that this is a coordinated attack. We are aware that one of the sites does contain indications of explosives," London police chief Sir Ian Blair said on Sky News.
He said authorities had not received any warning. "We have been at a very high state of alert. Of course if there had been any kind of specific warnings we would have dealt with it," he said.
Four explosions confirmed
Officials at hospitals surveyed by The Associated Press reported about 300 people treated for injuries following the explosions. A senior police official said about 150 people were seriously injured.
The hospitals confirmed one death, while police sources have said at least two people died.
British Home Secretary Charles Clarke said there were three explosions on the subway system and one on a bus. Earlier reports indicated six explosions.
“We do not know who or what organizations are responsible for these terrible criminal acts,” Clarke said.
Prime Minister Blair later left the G-8 summit for the day to return to London, while the other leaders continued the meeting.
"They will never succeed in destroying what we hold dear in this country and in other civilized nations throughout the world," Blair said before leaving and flanked by fellow G-8 leaders, including President Bush. "We shall prevail and they shall not."
Bush later warned Americans to be "extra vigilant" as they head to work.
Bus destroyed
One explosion destroyed a double-decker bus at Russell Square in central London, near the ritish Museum.
"I was on the bus in front and heard an incredible bang, I turned round and half the double decker bus was in the air," Belinda Seabrook told Press Association, the British news agency.
She said the bus was packed with people. "It was a massive explosion and there were papers and half a bus flying through the air," she said.
Jay Kumar said he ran out of his business when he heard a loud explosion. He said the top deck of the bus had collapsed, sending people tumbling to the floor.
Many appeared badly injured, and bloodied people ran from the scene. “People were running this way panicked," he said. "They knew it was a bomb. Debris flying all over, mostly glass.”
'Walking wounded'
Clarke said explosions also went off on subway trains at or near these stations: Edgware Road, Aldgate and King's Cross.
“It was chaos,” said Gary Lewis, who was evacuated from a subway train at King’s Cross station. “The one haunting image was someone whose face was totally black and pouring with blood.”
Police sealed off large areas around other underground and mainline rail stations. Firemen donned chemical protection suits before rushing into stations.
A doctor at Aldgate said at least 90 people were wounded at that location alone. At least two people were said to have been killed at that station.
"There are some walking wounded at Aldgate," said a spokesman for City of London police, speaking on condition of anonymity. "We are not sure of the scale of the incident. Reports are still coming in."
'Loads of people screaming'
Bradley Anderson, a subway passenger, told Sky News that "there was some kind of explosion" as his train reached the Edgware Road station in northeast London. "Everything went black and we collided into some kind of oncoming train," Anderson said.
Simon Corvett, who was on an eastbound train from Edgware Road station, said that "all of sudden there was this massive huge bang."
"It was absolutely deafening and all the windows shattered," he said. "There were just loads of people screaming and the carriages filled with smoke. You could see the carriage opposite was completely gutted. There were some people in real trouble."
A Web site posting said the blasts were the work of a group calling itself the "Secret Organization of al-Qaida in Europe."
No such group had previously been reported and the claim could not be verified. The claim did not appear on any of the Web sites normally used by al-Qaida.
Clarke said efforts would be made to resume underground and bus operations as soon as possible but gave no indication of when that might be.
“People are strongly advised not to travel into central London as the emergency services must be allowed to do their work in the most effective way they can,” he said.