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Rediff.com  » News » Cargo plane may have been blast target: UK

Cargo plane may have been blast target: UK

Source: PTI
October 30, 2010 23:22 IST
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The target of an explosive device found on a cargo plane in the United Kingdom while in transit to the United States may have been the aircraft itself, the British home secretary said on Saturday.

A major international terror alert was sparked after security staff found printer cartridges with wires attached in cargo hubs at East Midlands Airport in the UK and Dubai on Friday.

Al Qaeda is believed to be behind the plot. "I can confirm that the device was viable and could have exploded. The target may have been an aircraft and had it detonated the aircraft could have been brought down," Theresa May said.

Speaking after a meeting of the COBRA, the UK government's emergency planning committee, to discuss the security situation, May said: "We do not believe that the perpetrators of the attack would have known the location of the device when it was planned to explore".

Earlier, two mail bombs sent from Yemen to synagogues in Chicago unleashed fears of a renewed Qaeda terror offensive against the US and European nations.

President Barack Obama termed it as a "credible terrorist threat". May said the investigation "remains sensitive."

"We are working closely with international partners to increase our understanding of this case and of course to bring those responsible to justice".

However, she said, "At this stage there is no information to indicate another attack is imminent."

"At this stage there is nothing to suggest that any location in the UK was being targeted. We are urgently considering what steps need to be put in place regarding security of freight originating from Yemen. For security reasons there are currently no direct flights from Yemen to the UK," she said.

May said she had spoken with US Secretary for Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. She underlined that the safety and security of the UK "remains my number one priority".

"We are working closely with our international colleagues and will continue to do so." Britain suspended direct flights from Yemen in January after a Nigerian "underwear bomber" with links to the Arab country allegedly tried to blow up a US airliner over Detroit on Christmas day in 2009.

British police said a suspect package had arrived aboard an "America-registered cargo plane" at East Midlands Airport during a "routine stopover".

The plane was en route to Chicago via Philadelphia. Police said "explosives officers" attended the airport but the airport "continued to operate as normal during the day."

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