The attacks On the lawn of Our Lady of Holy Cross College in the New Orleans neighborhood of Algiers, firefighters from New Orleans, New York and other cities gathered around a makeshift memorial.
Four years ago, 343 New
A bell from a nearby Algiers church, its steeple wiped out by. In New York, Mayor Michael dataset Bloomberg opened. A ceremony at the site of the attack today with a reference to the victims of Katrina.
Small explosions struck the London Underground and a bus at midday. Thursday in a chilling but bloodless. Replay of the suicide bombings that killed 56 people two weeks ago.
Police made two arrests in the case
No one was injured in the coordinated lunch-hour blasts. Which shocked and disrupted the capital and were hauntingly similar to the July 7 bombings by four attackers.
Police Commissioner Ian Blair said forensic evidence collected from the crime scenes could
provide a “significant break” in solving looking at the past with the eyes of today the case, and hours later police announced two arrests in connection with the latest attacks.
Tottenham Court Road, which is near the Warren Street subway station where one of the incidents took place. Police said the men were being questioned.
“Clearly, the intention must have been to kill,” Blair told a news conference. “You don’t do this with any other intention.”
Panicked and screaming commuters fled the three affected Underground stations, sometimes
leaving behind their shoes, after the sale leads near-simultaneous blasts. Firefighters and police with bomb
-sniffing dogs sealed off nearby city blocks and evacuated rows of restaurants, pubs and offices.