26.9 C
Karachi
Friday, April 19, 2024
- Advertisement -

Parcel bombs sent to London transport hubs had Irish stamps: Sky News

TOP NEWS

Reuters
Reuters
Reuters is an international news organisation owned by Thomson Reuters

LONDON: Parcel bombs sent to London’s main airport and two other major transport hubs on Tuesday had Irish stamps and Irish police are now assisting British counter-terrorism officers, broadcaster Sky News said on Tuesday.

No one was injured by the bombs, one of which caused a small fire in an office building at London’s Heathrow airport and the others were discovered at London City airport and the city’s biggest rail station, Waterloo.

“At least two of the packages had Irish stamps,” Sky News said. “Irish police are assisting with the investigation.”

London’s police force declined to comment on the report.

Irish police join probe into parcel bombs at London transport hubs

Ireland’s police service said on Tuesday it was helping British colleagues investigate who mailed three small bombs to two of London’s airports and a major rail station on Tuesday.

No one was injured by the devices, one of which caused a small fire in an office building at Heathrow airport, Europe’s busiest international air hub.

Broadcaster Sky News said at least two of the packages had Irish stamps, and Ireland’s police service subsequently confirmed it was helping British police to investigate.

“The Met Police Counter Terrorism Command is treating the incidents as a linked series and is keeping an open mind regarding motives,” London’s police force said, declining to comment immediately on a possible Irish link.

Conflict over the British-ruled province of Northern Ireland claimed thousands of lives from the late 1960s through to the Good Friday peace agreement in 1998, mostly in Northern Ireland but also in mainland Britain and the Republic of Ireland.

Small groups opposed to the Good Friday Agreement have remained active since.

The United Kingdom is on its second-highest level of terrorism alert, with security services seeing an attack by international terrorists as “highly likely”.

In 2017, five attacks in London and Manchester killed a total of 36 people.

However, the risk of Northern Ireland-related terrorism in mainland Britain was graded as “moderate”, meaning an attack was viewed as possible but not likely.

London police received the first report of a suspicious device, at Heathrow, at 0955 GMT after staff opened a package which caught fire.

Later, a similar package was identified in the post room of London’s busiest rail station, Waterloo, and a third was found in an office at London City airport in east London.

Flights were unaffected, though a light rail line linking London City with central London was temporarily suspended.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
 

POLL

Will the PML-N led govt be able to steer Pakistan out of economic crisis?

- Advertisement -
 

MORE STORIES