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Tag: manchester attack

  • U.K. agency missed chance to stop attack at Ariana Grande’s Manchester concert: report – National | Globalnews.ca

    U.K. agency missed chance to stop attack at Ariana Grande’s Manchester concert: report – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Britain’s domestic intelligence agency didn’t act swiftly enough on key information and missed a significant opportunity to prevent the suicide bombing that killed 22 people at a 2017 Ariana Grande concert in northwest England, an inquiry found Thursday.

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    ‘We can’t wrap our children in cotton wool’: Parents of teenage Manchester victims speak out

    Retired judge John Saunders, who led the inquiry into the Manchester Arena attack, said that one MI5 officer admitted they considered intelligence about suicide bomber Salman Abedi to be a possible national security concern, but didn’t discuss it with colleagues quickly enough.

    “I have found a significant missed opportunity to take action that might have prevented the attack,” he said.

    Abedi, 22, set off a knapsack bomb in the arena’s foyer at the end of the May 22, 2017 concert, as thousands of young fans, including children, were leaving the pop star’s show. Abedi died in the explosion.

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    His brother, Hashem Abedi, was convicted in 2020 of helping to plan and carry out the attack. He was sentenced to life in prison.

    Saunders said had the MI5 acted on the intelligence it received, it could have led to Abedi being stopped at Manchester Airport on his return from Libya just four days before the attack.


    Click to play video: 'Manchester Arena bombing suspect’s father, two brothers among arrested'


    Manchester Arena bombing suspect’s father, two brothers among arrested


    Richard Scorer, a lawyer representing 11 of the bereaved families, said the report was a “devastating conclusion for us.”

    “It is now very clear that there was a failure to properly assess key intelligence about Salman Abedi; a failure to put it into proper context, and _ most catastrophic of all _ a delay in acting on it,” Scorer said. “The failures exposed in this report are unacceptable.”

    Multiple MI5 witnesses gave evidence behind closed doors to the inquiry and the intelligence wasn’t publicly disclosed.

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    Abedi had been a “subject of interest” to MI5 officials in 2014, but his case was closed shortly after because he was deemed to be low-risk.

    Saunders also said that authorities failed to refer Abedi to the government’s counterterrorism program, known as Prevent.

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    ‘You are so strong’: Ariana Grande visits, hugs child victims of Manchester attack

    “I have concluded that there was at least a period during Salman Abedi’s journey to violent extremism when he should have been referred,” he said.

    Thursday’s report was the third and final one into the attack. Saunders previously criticized the arena’s security staff and local police for failing to identify Abedi as a threat. He has also slammed delays and failings in the response of emergency services on the night of the bombing.

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press

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  • Ariana Grande Sends Christmas Gifts To Manchester Hospitals 5 Years After Attack

    Ariana Grande Sends Christmas Gifts To Manchester Hospitals 5 Years After Attack

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    Pop star Ariana Grande is still giving back in the form of Christmas gifts to patients at children’s hospitals in Manchester, England, the site of the fatal bombing that occurred following her concert in 2017.

    Grande previously gave roughly 1,000 presents to the city’s children’s hospitals in 2021 and £100 Amazon vouchers to each child at Royal Manchester’s Children’s Hospital and Manchester Royal Infirmary in 2020, the Manchester Evening News reported.

    The “Break Free” singer’s recent donation comes five years after a bombing at Manchester Arena killed 22 people and left hundreds more injured after a man blew himself up as fans were exiting her concert.

    Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital Charity wrote in an Instagram post on Monday that it received more gifts from the singer for the holidays and said the gifts would go to “babies, children and teenagers” at Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, Trafford General, Wythenshawe Hospital and North Manchester General Hospital.

    “It’s so wonderful that Ariana has once again been so thoughtful and made this special donation to our family of hospitals,” wrote Tanya Hamid, Interim Director of Manchester Foundation Trust Charity.

    “We know Manchester, and in particular Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, holds a special place in Ariana’s heart.”

    It isn’t the first time Grande has honored those impacted by the attack at her show.

    The singer performed at – and helped organize – the “One Love Manchester” concert at the city’s Old Trafford Cricket Ground two weeks after the 2017 attack.

    The concert – which featured the likes of Justin Bieber, Liam Gallagher and Coldplay – reportedly raised $3 million for the We Love Manchester Emergency Fund, a fund established to help those impacted by the attack and their families.

    In 2018, Grande also released “Get Well Soon” – a song which deals with themes of anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder – on her album “Sweetener.”

    The song was meant to be a “musical hug,” Grande told DJ Ebro Darden on Apple Music 1, and added that it’s “about being there for each other and helping each other through scary times and anxiety.”

    “Get Well Soon” includes 40 seconds of silence at its conclusion making it five minutes and twenty-two seconds long in total (the date of the attack was May 22, 2017).

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