Police investigating a network
Greater Manchester Police Chief Constable Ian Hopkins said on Wednesday that investigators believe Abedi did not act alone.“This is clearly a network that we are investigating, and extensive activity is taking place across Greater Manchester as we speak. There are no military personnel patrolling Manchester but we are therefore able to receive additional armed policing support because of this [the Operation Temperer] plan.” Greater Manchester Police chief constable Ian HopkinsThe Manchester Evening News reported that police believe the person who made the bomb is still at large. Police have said they are confident they know the identity of all the victims, but forensic post-mortems are likely to take several days.
Seven arrests in the UK, two in Libya
Early on Wednesday, Greater Manchester Police carried out raids of at least two properties, one on Granby Row in the city centre and one in Aston Street in Fallowfield, near where the bomber lived. Three men were arrested. Later, police said a man was arrested in Wigan in connection with the Manchester attack. The man was carrying a package which is being assessed.International leaks
Home Secretary Amber Rudd criticised leaks of UK information by US intelligence services. She said authorities want to control information flow and described US leaks as irritating. Rudd said she told US officials that it must not happen again. Several hours after Rudd’s criticism, NBC News reported that an unnamed US official said the bomber likely “had help” making a “big and sophisticated bomb,” that he was identified by a bank card in his pocket, and that his family warned about him in the past, saying he was dangerous. NBC also said Abedi had ties to al-Qaeda and had received terrorist training abroad. Later, the New York Times published detailed images of what it said was the bomb. Reacting to the leaks, a spokesperson for the National Police Chiefs’ Council said that, while it valued important relationships with trusted intelligence, law enforcement and security partners around the world, breaching that trust “undermines these relationships, and undermines our investigations and the confidence of victims, witnesses and their families.” “This damage is even greater when it involves unauthorised disclosure of potential evidence in the middle of a major counter terrorism investigation,” the spokesperson added. Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham said he spoke to the US ambassador about US officials leaking details of the investigation. Prime Minister Theresa May will speak to Donald Trumpabout the leaks at a NATO summit in Brussels on Thursday, The Guardian reported.Other stories on the Manchester Arena attack
Updated between May 22 and May 23: Bombing at Manchester Arena kills 22 people and injures over 50 others
Friends and family remember the Manchester Arena victims
As it happened
A US intel official tells @nbcnews UK bomber likely "had help" making “big and sophisticated bomb.”
— Richard Engel (@RichardEngel) May 24, 2017
A US intel official tells @nbcnews bomber ID’d by bank card in his pocket. Confirmed by facial id.
— Richard Engel (@RichardEngel) May 24, 2017
A US intel official tells @nbcnews members of bomber's family warned sec officials about him in past, that he was “dangerous.”
— Richard Engel (@RichardEngel) May 24, 2017
UKIP first party to break the truce, will launch its manifesto tomorrow. Paul Nuttall said "we must ensure the democratic process continues"
— Daniel Hewitt (@DanielHewittITV) May 24, 2017
BBC News understands a female police officer was killed in Manchester bombing. She was off duty at the time.
— Danny Shaw (@DannyShawNews) May 24, 2017
Female officer's husband is critically ill. Their 2 children were injured.
— Danny Shaw (@DannyShawNews) May 24, 2017
FM: Decision will free up Scottish armed police as contingency to be deployed across UK – at the moment no plans to do so
— Nick Eardley (@nickeardleybbc) May 24, 2017
Nicola Sturgeon: military personnel deployed at 12 civil nuclear and ministry of defence sites in Scotland – areas not open to the public pic.twitter.com/dzHVbulRWD
— Philip Sim (@BBCPhilipSim) May 24, 2017