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Jul 14 2005
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By Agencies   

ImageBritish police have identified the man thought to be the mastermind of last week's bombings in London in which at least 52 people died, a report says.

The British-born man in his 30s, of Pakistani origin, arrived at a UK port last month and left the country again the day before the attacks on 7 July, The Times newspaper reported on Thursday.

The suspected bombers were also Britons of Pakistani origin.

According to The Times, security sources say they believe the mastermind was involved with previous terror operations and had links with followers of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida group in the United States.

It was believed he had visited the bombers in their home city of Leeds, and also identified targets on the London Underground rail subway system, where three of the four bombs exploded, the paper said.

Security sources also said he was likely to have trained the recruits in how to trigger their rucksack-carried bombs, three of which went off almost simultaneously at around 8:50 am (0750 GMT), at the peak of Thursday morning's rush hour.

Probe switched {mosgoogle right}

Police have reportedly switched their investigation towards seeking the mastermind of the attacks since learning that the four bombers killed themselves in the attacks.

According to The Times's Thursday edition, police are also seeking a possible fifth member of the bombers' terror cell, who was also seen at Luton station, north of London, from where the attackers travelled into the capital.

The man, believed to also be of Pakistani origin, could still be at large in London, the paper said. Image

Police additionally want to interview an Egyptian-born university lecturer who was in Leeds until a few weeks ago.

According to The Sun newspaper, the man, who it named as 33-year-old Magdi El-Nashar, was studying for a biochemistry doctorate at Leeds University and disappeared just before the attacks, it is thought to Egypt.

His rented house was one of six addresses in and around the city raided by police on Tuesday morning, the report added.

Late on Wednesday, anti-terror police spread their search to the market town of Aylesbury, about 64 km northwest of London, searching one residential address but making no arrests and finding no explosives.

Anglo-French dispute

The bombers' background became the subject of a row between London and Paris, with Charles Clarke, the interior minister, denying comments by his French counterpart that British police had arrested some of the suspects in the past.

"It is completely and utterly untrue. I am absolutely staggered he should make that assertion," Clarke told Sky TV.
He later told Channel Four News, however, that the police and intelligence services were looking at any previous brushes with the law the suspects may have had.

A British police source said it was possible some of the men might have come to the attention of police in the course of normal criminal investigations.

Media reports

"Clearly there will be people behind this group and involved in this and clearly we are seeking those people"

UK police spokesman 

The BBC said two of the suspected bombers had been arrested for minor offences in 2004 and released with a caution -one for disorderly conduct and one for shoplifting.

The BBC also said police were hunting a fifth man, connected to the attackers, but not one of them. The report could not be confirmed by a London police spokeswoman.

Police were granted a warrant enabling them to continue questioning until Saturday a man arrested in West Yorkshire on Tuesday in connection with the attacks.

Police have said four bombers blew up three underground trains and a double-decker bus last Thursday in an attack that officials say bore the hallmark of the al Qaeda network.

British-born bombers

At least three of them came from the Leeds area in northern England, police said. The fourth was believed to be from the same area and a friend of the other three, Sky TV reported, citing a senior security source. Image

The BBC said two of the suspected bombers had been arrested for minor offences in 2004 and released with a caution -one for disorderly conduct and one for shoplifting.

The BBC also said police were hunting a fifth man, connected to the attackers, but not one of them. The report could not be confirmed by a London police spokeswoman.

Police were granted a warrant enabling them to continue questioning until Saturday a man arrested in West Yorkshire on Tuesday in connection with the attacks.

Police have said four bombers blew up three underground trains and a double-decker bus last Thursday in an attack that officials say bore the hallmark of the al Qaeda network.

British-born bombers

At least three of them came from the Leeds area in northern England, police said. The fourth was believed to be from the same area and a friend of the other three, Sky TV reported, citing a senior security source. Image

The official, who declined to be identified, said Tanweer was believed to have been the mastermind of the bomb plot, and that the British government had requested information about two of the four men.

The Muslim Council of Britain said it was stunned that those claiming to share its faith seemed to be behind the attacks. "Nothing in Islam can ever justify the evil actions of the bombers," secretary-general Iqbal Sacranie said in a statement.

Prime Minister Tony Blair urged Britain to be tolerant amid fears of a backlash against its 1.6 million Muslims. He said he would look urgently at new measures to tackle extremism, including boosting efforts to stop people entering the country to stir up hatred.

In Brussels, Blair was backed by French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy in calling for tighter European border controls. Sarkozy also said there was a strong suspicion the explosives used in the bombings came from the Balkans or eastern Europe.

Sarkozy called for EU member states to exchange intelligence on "radical Muslim preachers and imams whose actions disrupt public order by their support for violence, hatred and discrimination", according to his speaking notes.

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