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British police hunting for bomb plot clues search Scottish house


Police searching for clues in three car bomb plots investigated a rented house near Glasgow on Thursday where authorities believe the bombs were made, a British security official said.

Authorities believe the house is where the bombs used in two London attempts and on Glasgow airport were made, said the official, on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case.

The government lowered the terrorism threat level from critical to severe after the arrest of eight people connected with the three failed attacks, but authorities were still investigating the possibility there may be other suspects on the peripheries of the plot still at large.

With all suspects connected to the medical profession, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has ordered an investigation of the procedures of recruiting foreign doctors.

At least two of the car bomb suspects _ most of whom are doctors _ are believed to have rented a house just a few miles from the Glasgow airport, where two men crashed a gas-laden Jeep Cherokee into the barriers outside the main terminal on Saturday.

"They did not have a plan B," said Sgt. Torquil Campbell, the officer who apprehended the two at the airport after they attempted to ignite the propane-tank bombs in their car but instead only caused a fiery inferno.

"They both appeared very calm and collected, very assured of themselves," Campbell said on Sky TV. "They had nothing else to do _ it was as if they were waiting there to get blown up."

British news outlets, citing unidentified sources, said the two men slept upstairs in the house and used the downstairs to assemble bombs.

Police have refused to identify which suspects lived in the house, but Denis O'Donnell of the local Paisley Cab Company, said his taxis had picked up Iraqi-born physician Bilal Abdulla from the house nearly 20 times since May.

Brian Harvey, a 60-year-old construction worker who lives on the street where the house is located, told The Associated Press he had seen a green sports utility vehicle outside the property that was being searched. Police were still outside the house on Thursday morning.

Neighbor Susan Hay told AP that police said they were "stripping" the house to look for fingerprints and other forensic materials. Ahe large tent set up on Sunday was still hanging over the garage.

A British investigator, meanwhile, was questioning an Indian doctor arrested in Australia.

Australian police arrested Muhammad Haneef, 27, on Monday in the eastern city of Brisbane as he tried to board a flight with a one-way ticket, believed to be to India via Malaysia.

Haneef, who moved to Australia last year, worked in 2005 at a hospital in northern England where another suspect arrested in connection to the failed attacks also worked.

In a case with eerie parallels, a man was convicted Thursday in Manchester of possessing terrorist training materials, including instructions on using gas canisters to make car bombs.

Prosecutors also said they found material on the computer of Omar Altimimi, 37, that identified nightclubs and airports as "suitable targets." He faces sentencing on Friday.

However, police have reported no links between Altimimi, an asylum seeker who came to Britain from the Netherlands, and last weekend's attacks.

Though a linkage could not be totally ruled out, nightclubs are a common terrorist target _ evidenced by attacks in Bali _ and that plans to build propane bombs are readily available on the Internet, said Bob Ayers, a former U.S. intelligence officer now at London's Chatham House thinktank.

"They've got all the evidence they're ever going to have _ there may still information coming in, but it will be based on they've already got, like DNA, from the cars," Ayers said.

Using cell phones recovered from the two Mercedes sedan car-bombs in London and other telephone records, authorities would also be building up a "link analysis" of what calls were made, Ayers said.

"They're recreating the network of all the people involved and building that network using cell phone records, computer records, DNA, fingerprints _ anything that will establish who was communicating with whom," he said.

In the recent case, six physicians are among the eight suspects, including the Iraqi Abdulla, one from Jordan, two from India and a man reportedly from Lebanon who trained in Slovakia. Also in custody are the Jordanian's wife, a medical assistant, and a doctor and medical student thought to be from the Middle East. None has been charged in connection with the Glasgow attack or the two bomb-laden cars found, unexploded, in London a week ago.

---

Additional reporting by David Stringer in London and Ben Mcconville in Glasgow

Copyright 2007 AP Features
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright (c) Mochila, Inc.

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Author:DAVID RISING
Publication:AP Features
Date:Jul 5, 2007
Words:771
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