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 ★阿修羅♪
爆発物は軍隊用? + 爆破されたバスの監視カメラがたまたま壊れていた!?
http://www.asyura2.com/0505/war71/msg/1143.html
投稿者 バルセロナより愛を込めて 日時 2005 年 7 月 12 日 18:16:28: SO0fHq1bYvRzo
 

爆発物は軍隊用? + 爆破されたバスの監視カメラがたまたま壊れていた!?


7月12日付タイムズ(オンライン)は、7・7事変で使用された爆発物は軍隊用の者であった可能性が高いことを報道しています。この記事によると「バルカンから英国に運び込まれた」可能性がある、ということです。また同日のカタルーニャ地方紙エル・ペリオディコによると、この軍隊用の爆発物はSemtexの可能性が高いとされています。3・11にはGOMA2という鉱山用のダイナマイトが使われたそうです。

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・
http://www.elperiodico.com/default.asp?idpublicacio_PK=5&idioma=CAS&idnoticia_PK=226716&idseccio_PK=4&h=050712
El mismo patrón que el 11-M
・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・

3・11じゃ、このGOMA2は疑惑の「不発弾」から発見され、スペイン北部アストゥリアス地方の麻薬売人&警察内通者(密告屋)のスペイン人チンピラ数名が逮捕されて、爆発物製造の中心人物に仕立て上げられています。

(参照)
http://www.asyura2.com/0505/war70/msg/556.html
投稿者 バルセロナより愛を込めて 日時 2005 年 5 月 21 日 08:07:48
3・11「不発弾」は警察が捏造していた?(エル・ムンド紙の爆弾?報道!!)

さてさて、今回はどんなオトギバナシがでっち上げられるのかな?

私は爆発物には余り詳しくないので、誰かご存知の方がおられたらこのSemtexについて解説お願いします。


また、やはり7月12日付のガーディアン(電網版)は、現在警察がロンドン市内の監視カメラ映像の分析を行っているが、7日に爆破されたバスの監視カメラがたまたま何週間か前から壊れていたため、犯人の割り出しが不可能である、と伝えています。このバスの爆破は「犯人が誤ってバスの中で爆破させてしまった」可能性があると言われていますので、ばっちり写っていた可能性が高かったはずなのですが。

ま、このテの事件ではいつもそうだけど、実にうまい具合に「偶然」が起こるものだ。


以下に、上記のタイムズとガーディアンの記事を貼り付けておきます。

・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・・
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,22989-1690391,00.html
July 12, 2005

Terrorist gang 'used military explosives'

BY MICHAEL EVANS, SEAN O’NEILL AND PHILIP WEBSTER

A SINGLE bombmaker using high-grade military explosives is believed to be responsible for building the four devices that killed more than 50 people last week, The Times can reveal.


Similar components from the explosive devices have been found at all four murder sites, leading detectives to believe that each of the 10lb rucksack bombs was the work of one man. They also believe that the materials used were not home made but sophisticated military explosives, possibly smuggled into Britain from the Balkans.
“The nature of the explosives appears to be military, which is very worrying,” said Superintendent Christophe Chaboud, the chief of the French anti-terrorist police, who was in London to help Scotland Yard.
News of the breakthrough comes as a Times poll conducted in the aftermath of the bombings indicates that an overwhelming majority of the British public favours a tough approach to terrorist suspects. Almost 90 per cent of people want the police to be given new powers to arrest people suspected of planning terrorist acts, tighter immigration controls and strict baggage inspections.
Londoners, who bore the brunt of last Thursday’s carnage, were not as supportive of draconian measures as people in the rest of the country.
The public anger will strengthen Tony Blair’s hand as he prepares to speed up new anti-terrorist laws to help the hunt for the bombers. “If, as the fuller picture about these incidents emerges and the investigation proceeds, it becomes clear that there are powers which the police and intelligence agencies need immediately to combat terrorism, it is plainly sensible to reserve the right to return to Parliament with an accelerated timetable,” he said.
More than 800 police officers were being drafted in to assist Scotland Yard’s anti-terrorist branch in Britain’s largest criminal inquiry. Film from 2,500 CCTV cameras in the centre of the capital is being examined and more is being taken from cameras across Greater London. Detectives are also searching for a vehicle, flat or garage that the terrorists may have used as a bomb factory.
It is understood that the examination of the No 30 bus at Tavistock Square has yielded vital fragments that have sharpened the focus of the police inquiry. Forensic pathologists have been paying particular attention to the remains of two bodies found in the mangled wreckage of the double-decker.
A senior police source said: “There are two bodies which have to be examined in great detail because they appear to have been holding the bomb or sitting on top of it. One of those might turn out to be the bomber.” A decapitated head was found at the bus scene which has been, in Israeli experience, the sign of a suicide bomber.
The confirmed death toll stands at 52 but is expected to rise. Police family liaison officers have been assigned to 74 families. As London prepares to hold a two-minute silence and mass vigil on Thursday to commemorate its dead, 12,000 United States service personnel have been ordered not to visit the city for security reasons.

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http://www.guardian.co.uk/attackonlondon/story/0,16132,1526471,00.html

CCTV seizures raise hopes of quick identification of suspects

Rosie Cowan, crime correspondent
Tuesday July 12, 2005
The Guardian

Police may be able to pinpoint the London bombers on CCTV in as little as two weeks, a terrorism expert predicted last night.
As officers began the task of collating and analysing thousands of hours of CCTV, mobile phone and video footage, Andrew Silke, of the University of East London, pointed to the case of David Copeland, the London nail bomber.
Copeland was identified by his boss and a cab driver after police released CCTV pictures of him outside Brixton station in April 1999, the day he planted the first of three bombs.
Dr Silke said: "It took just over three weeks to find David Copeland and there was less footage available. I think police will identify these bombers in a similar time because the systems involved are much better.
"We should within two weeks have those pictures released to the media - at least some images of some of the bombers."
In the Copeland case, Scotland Yard sought help from Nasa to enhance the grainy images.
But the job facing detectives investigating last week's bombings is huge, as they have no clear idea where the bombers entered or left the underground system, or where the bus bomber got on, and if he got off or died in the blast.
The CCTV camera on the number 30 bus, which blew up near Tavistock Square, had reportedly not been working for some weeks. "It is a real pity as these would have been the easiest ones from which to identify the bomber," said Dr Silke. "That is a real loss."
But, he added, "the good thing about the tube's system is that it has so many cameras and even if a couple were down it will still be on there somewhere.
"It will take a lot longer to analyse the tube images, however."
Officers have taken tapes from CCTV cameras at stations throughout the Underground system, and from nearby streets, shops and banks. They will work backwards from pictures taken closest to the scene of the bombs, and may even have to go beyond London, if they feel the bombers came into the city from further afield.
Mobile phone and video footage taken by the public immediately after the attacks could also provide vital information. More than 250 emails containing footage and photos have already been sent to a dedicated Scotland Yard email address images@met.police.uk.
Up to 400 extra officers have been drafted in from London boroughs and other Metropolitan police units to help the anti-terrorist squad. Some will help watch the CCTV and other footage.
"It is a matter of painstakingly ploughing through all of this, watching for things which may only become significant in retrospect," said one senior officer. "But it could be as simple as someone getting on at one stop with a bag and off at another without it. It's all about spotting those vital moments."
Detectives have seized 2,500 CCTV tapes, and are following up about 2,000 calls to the anti-terrorist hotline as well as 115,000 calls to the casualty bureau.
Andy Trotter, deputy chief constable of the British Transport police, said that forensic teams were working closely alongside the rescue teams to try to find any vital clues. "The investigation is obviously in full swing and there is a huge effort in recovering the CCTV images across London in order to provide evidence to convict those guilty of these murders," he said.
Mr Trotter refused to comment on reports that the CCTV camera on the bus was broken before the bomb went off, saying it was impossible to tell at this early stage.
Police yesterday launched an appeal for photographs, video footage or mobile phone images taken after the London bombings.
Peter Clarke, head of Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist branch, said: "These images may contain crucial information which may help detectives in this complex and painstaking inquiry."
Police were also x-raying bodies to see if any bomb parts or timing devices, which could be vital clues, were embedded in them.

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