Britain has foiled an Islamist suicide plot to kill Prime Minister
Theresa May with a bomb in Downing Street, Sky news reported, citing
unidentified sources.
Police and security services believe the plotters
planned to launch an improvised explosive device at Downing Street -
where the premier lives - and then kill May in the ensuing chaos, Sky
said. Such is the seriousness of the plot that the director general of MI5, Britain’s domestic security agency, briefed cabinet ministers on the plot, Sky said.
Sky said the plot was foiled with the arrest last week of two men by armed police.
London
police said that two men arrested last week had been charged with
terrorism offenses and would appear in Westminster Magistrates’ Court on
Wednesday.
It identified them as Naa‘imur Zakariyah Rahman, 20, of north London, and Mohammed Aqib Imran, 21, of south-east Birmingham.
Britain
faces the most acute threat ever from Islamist militants seeking to
inflict mass attacks, often with spontaneous plots that take just days
to bring to execution, the head of the MI5 said in October.
After
four militant attacks this year that killed 36 people in Britain - the
deadliest spate since the London “7/7” bombings of July 2005 - MI5 chief
Andrew Parker said the threat was at the highest tempo he had seen in
34 years of espionage.
Number 10 Downing Street is the official residence of the prime minister. It is heavily guarded.
In
1991, Irish Republican Army (IRA) militants launched a mortar bomb
attack on Number 10. John Major, the prime minister at the time, was
inside but not hurt. A Downing Street spokesman declined immediate comment on the report.
No comments:
Post a Comment