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Police name Manchester bomber as 22-year old Salman Abedi

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Police identified 22-year-old Salman Abedi as the suspected suicide bomber who detonated bombs as throngs of teenagers poured out of an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester that killed 22 people.

The suspect carrying explosives acted as a lone attacker and died in the blast Monday night, which left the wounded and the dead scattered across the arena’s bloodied entrance and sent screaming girls running for cover, according to police.
Greater Manchester Chief Constable Ian Hopkins named the suspect Tuesday but said that the man’s identity had not been yet confirmed by a coroner.

The blast marked the deadliest terror attack on British soil since the 2005 London bombings. Hundreds of residents remembered the newest victims during a Tuesday evening vigil.

A powerful explosion shook part of the cavernous Manchester Arena late Monday as concertgoers streamed out following the American pop star’s last song.

ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack but offered no evidence.

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An 8-year-old girl and an 18-year-old woman have been named as the first victims of the attack, which has drawn condemnation and horror from around the world as a heinous assault targeting children.

Key Developments

*Ariana Grande suspends her world tour.
*Police have carried out two raids in Manchester.
*Queen Elizabeth II described bombing as “act of barbarity.”
*59 people injured, some in life-threatening situations.
*US President Donald Trump slams attackers as “losers.”
*British Prime Minister says police have identified the suspect.

Dead bodies at the Manchester arena

People tend to the injured inside the Manchester Arena

ISIS said on its Telegram channel Tuesday that a “soldier of the caliphate” was able to “plant explosive devices” at the arena, a US counter-terrorism source told CNN. ISIS routinely claims attacks it has no proven links with.

But authorities have discovered no evidence of a link between the attacker and an established terror group, a British counter-terrorism official told CNN.

No determination has been on the sophistication of the explosive device or what chemicals were involved, the official said.
A US counter-terrorism official said bombing “looks much like” an ISIS attack but that American intelligence officials were working with British counterparts to determine more.

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On Tuesday evening, hundreds attended a vigil outside Manchester City Hall in honor of the victims.

“We will stand together to say that this city is greater than the force that aligns itself against it,” David Walker, Bishop of Manchester, told the crowd. “We are sending a signal not just to Manchester, but across the world that you can not defeat us because love in the end is always stronger than hate.”

Video from inside the arena showed girls screaming as they scrambled over chairs and railings to escape the 21,000-seat venue, while photographs showed bodies laying bloodied on the floor.

After an emergency Cabinet meeting, British Prime Minister Theresa May condemned the attack as “callous” and “cowardly.”
“We struggle to comprehend the warped and twisted mind that sees a room packed with young children not a scene to cherish but as an opportunity for carnage,” May said in London before leaving for Manchester.

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