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British police make ‘significant arrest’ in train attack probe

By AFP
16 September 2017   |   10:30 am
British police said they arrested an 18-year-old man on Saturday at a Channel port in their investigation into the bombing of a London Underground train.

Police forensics officers works alongside an underground tube train at a platform at Parsons Green underground tube station in west London on September 15, 2017, following an incident on an underground tube carriage at the station.<br />British police are treating an incident on a London Underground train on Friday as an act of terrorism, saying “a number of people” had been injured. Twenty-two people were injured after a bomb blast on a packed London Underground train on Friday, the National Health Service said in a statement. / AFP PHOTO / Adrian DENNIS /

British police said they arrested an 18-year-old man on Saturday at a Channel port in their investigation into the bombing of a London Underground train.

“The 18-year-old man was arrested by Kent Police in the port area of Dover this morning, Saturday, 16 September, under section 41 of the Terrorism Act,” police said in a statement that described the arrest as “significant”.

“Although we are pleased with the progress made, this investigation continues and the threat level remains at critical,” police said.

The man is in custody at a local police station and will be be transferred to a south London police station in “due course”.

Thirty people were treated in hospital after a bomb detonated in a packed London Underground train on Friday morning, in what was Britain’s fifth terror attack in six months.

The toll was revised upwards by one early Saturday.

“This arrest will lead to more activity from our officers,” police said.

“For strong investigative reasons we will not give any more details on the man we arrested at this stage.

“This investigation continues and the threat level remains at critical,” the statement added.

The Islamic State group said an IS “detachment” had been behind the bombing.

Prime Minister Theresa May announced late Friday that the threat level had been raised to “critical — meaning another attack could be imminent — and said troops would take over guarding key sites to free police officers for deployment elsewhere.

Four previous attacks in London and Manchester this year claimed the lives of 35 people.

Three of those attacks involved a vehicle ploughing into pedestrians. The other was a bombing in May at a pop concert by US star Ariana Grande in Manchester which killed 22 people, including several children.

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