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July 24, 2005
Britain Says Man Killed by Police Had No Tie to Bombings
By ALAN COWELL and DON VAN NATTA Jr.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/24/international/24london.html?th=&oref=login&emc=th&pagewanted=print
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LONDON, July 23 - Scotland Yard admitted Saturday that a man police officers
gunned down at point-blank range in front of horrified subway passengers on
Friday had nothing to do with the investigation into the bombing attacks
here.
The man was identified by police as Jean Charles de Menezes, a 27-year-old
Brazilian, described by officers as an electrician on his way to work. "He
was not connected to incidents in central London on 21st July, 2005, in
which four explosive devices were partly detonated," a police statement
said.
At the same time, the police said they had found a link between four
attackers on July 7 and the men who tried to carry out carbon copy attacks
July 21. The July 7 attacks killed the bombers and 52 others.
A flier in a backpack found with undetonated explosives on a London bus was
for a whitewater rafting center at Bala, North Wales, where two of the July
7 bombers had been photographed just weeks before the attack, a police
official said.
The police also said late Saturday that after the failed attacks on July 21,
they found a mysterious package - possibly a fifth explosive device - in
Little Wormwood Scrubs, northwest of London.
The explosive was "almost exactly the same" as ones in the failed attacks on
that day, a police official said.
Of the fast-unfolding developments, the most overwhelming for many
Londoners, was the police admission that an apparently innocent man had been
gunned down in full public view - a killing that left the city even more
rattled after a wave of attacks, alarms, scares and shootings that, in a
brief three weeks has propelled London from the euphoria of the Live 8
concert in Hyde Park to a sense of embattled siege.
"For somebody to lose their life in such circumstances is a tragedy and one
that the Metropolitan Police Service regrets," a police statement said,
noting that the police had started a formal inquiry.
The admission by the police that it had killed a man not involved in the
investigation revived and fueled an already tense debate over the arming of
British police officers. It also came after a series of police misstatements
since July 7 when the first bombers struck. (Related Article)
The shooting shocked many of the country's 1.6 million Muslims, already
alarmed by a publicly acknowledged shoot-to-kill policy directed against
suspected suicide bombers. And it has dealt a major setback to the police
inquiry into suspected terrorist cells in London.
"This really is an appalling set of circumstances," said John O'Connor, a
former police commander. "The consequences are quite horrible." Azzam Tamimi,
head of the Muslim Association of Britain, said: "This is very frightening.
People will be afraid to walk the streets, or go on the tube, or carry
anything in their hands."
A cousin of the dead man, interviewed on Brazil's leading television
network, identified him as João Alves Menezes and said he was an electrician
who had been working in England for more than three years. The cousin, Alex
Pereira Alves, identified Mr. Menezes' body in London, the network said.
Mr. Menezes was from the interior state of Minas Gerais, home of the bulk of
migrants from Brazil to the United States and Europe and had been in Britain
legally, Mr. Alves said. He would have been on his way to work that morning,
he said, and had no reason to flee the police.
"How could they have done such a thing as to kill him from behind?" Mr.
Alves told the Globo Television Network. "How could they have confused and
killed a light-skinned person who had no resemblance at all to an Asian?"
Another cousin, Aleide Menezes, said in an interview with Brazil's national
radio network that Mr. Menezes understood English well and would have
understood the officer's instructions. Other relatives, in television and
newspaper interviews, said the family was Roman Catholic and that Mr.
Menezes had nothing to do with Islam.
In an official statement issued late Saturday, the Brazilian government said
it was "shocked and perplexed" by the killing and was waiting for an
explanation.
The shooting occurred the day after the copycat attackers tried to bomb
three other subway trains and a bus, but their bombs failed to explode.
Plainclothes police officers staking out an apartment followed a man who
emerged from it, then chased him into the Stockwell subway station and onto
a train. The man tripped, and one of the officers in pursuit fired five
rounds.
After the shooting, Sir Ian Blair, the police commissioner, said the man was
"directly linked to the ongoing and expanding antiterrorist operation," and
the police issued images from closed-circuit cameras of four suspects in the
failed attacks. They said the man they shot may not have been one of the
four, but he was still being sought in their inquiry.
A Friday statement said that the man's "clothing and his behavior at the
station added to their suspicions," apparently referring to reports that the
man was wearing a bulky jacket on a summer day.
Through most of Saturday, the police refused to give any further details.
Then, in the late afternoon, Scotland Yard issued its statement admitting
the "mistake." So far in the investigation, the police have detained two
suspects. It was not clear whether those men were among the four caught on
security cameras.
In the latest alarm on Saturday, police cordoned off an area in north-west
London, and Peter Clarke, head of London's Anti-Terrorist police, said that
a package that was discovered appeared "to have been left in the bushes,
rather than hidden."
"Naturally this is a matter of concern," he added.
The link between the two bombing teams, at the white water rafting center in
north Wales, is the latest in a series of connections made by detectives
since Thursday. They have found that the bombs for both teams were made of
the same homemade material, were roughly the same size and were carried in
similar backpacks, officials said.
Asked if Prime Minister Tony Blair would address the killing of Mr. Menezes,
a spokeswoman said Mr. Blair was "kept updated on all developments, but this
is a matter for the Metropolitan Police. We have nothing to add." But with
the nation jittery after the attacks and the shooting, Mr. Blair was
expected to confront political passions likely to be inflamed by what his
critics are depicting as excesses of a war on terrorism that have eroded
freedoms.
"This policy is another overreaction of the government and police," said
Ajmal Masroor, a spokesman for the Islamic Society of Britain.
Both the government and the police have sought the support of British
Muslims to assist in the inquiry.
"This will turn people against the police, and this is not good," said Mr.
Tamimi, of the Muslim Association. "We want that people stay beside the
police. We need to convince the people to cooperate."
Civil rights groups also seemed likely to demand new curbs on the police at
precisely the moment officers have been given much freer hand to pursue the
investigation.
"No one should rush to judgment in any case of this kind, especially at a
time of heightened tension," said Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, a
civil and human rights group. She acknowledged, however, that officers faced
"knife-edged, split-second decisions often made in times of great danger."
In a country used to unarmed police officers, the shooting seemed to be a
stark turning point - one that seemed even more portentous after the police
admission on Saturday.
The killing revived a never-resolved debate among the public and the police
over the arming of officers. In one recent case, officers faced trial after
shooting a man carrying a wooden table leg in the mistaken belief that he
was armed.
Some police officers authorized to carry weapons now say they prefer not to
because of the risk of prosecution if they make mistakes.
Normally British police officers are under orders to give ample warming and,
if they have no choice but to open fire, to aim to wound. However, according
to London's mayor, Ken Livingstone, that has given way to a shoot-to-kill
policy in some circumstances.
"If you are dealing with someone who might be a suicide bomber, if they
remain conscious they could trigger plastic explosives or whatever device is
on them. And therefore overwhelmingly in these circumstances it is going to
be a shoot-to-kill policy," he said after the shooting Friday, but before
the acknowledgment by the police that the dead man was not part of the
inquiry.
Police guidelines for dealing with suspected suicide bombers recommend
shooting at the head rather than the body in case the suspect is carrying
explosives.
Except in Northern Ireland, at airports and nuclear facilities, British
police officers are not routinely armed. A small percentage of officers -
roughly 7 percent in London - have weapons training, which is also required
for the use of Taser stun guns, available to nearly all police forces. As
routine weapons, officers carry batons and tear-gas-like spray. Of more than
30,000 officers in London, around 2,000 are authorized to carry weapons, a
Scotland Yard spokesman said, speaking anonymously under police rules.
Even before Saturday's police statement, Britons had been bracing to see how
their vaunted sense of fair play and civil rights survives the onslaught by
attackers and the measures to combat it.
"Many civil liberties will have to be infringed to impose the requirement on
all communities, including Britain's Muslims, to destroy the terrorists
before they destroy us," the author Tom Bower wrote in The Daily Mail on
Saturday.
The country's Muslim minority has expressed vulnerability to a backlash
since it was announced that the July 7 bombers were all Muslims, three of
them British-born descendants of Pakistani immigrants in the northern city
of Leeds. Groups linked to Al Qaeda have claimed responsibility for both
sets of attacks.
The Islamic Human Rights Commission said it feared that "innocent people may
lose their lives due to the new shoot-to-kill policy of the Metropolitan
Police."
The rash of attacks, incidents, alarms and arrests has rocked a city that,
even during the days of I.R.A. attacks, was used to being warned in advance
about bombings. Indeed, after several years of an I.R.A. truce in mainland
Britain, the howl of police sirens, the popping of gunfire and the thud of
explosives has ended a mood of complacency underpinned by Britain's relative
prosperity.
Now, after the bombings on July 7, the attempts on July 21, and the shooting
incident, the city seems far less sure of itself.
"The realization that the events of July 7 were not an isolated conspiracy
has changed the way that we travel on the city's public transport system,
probably forever," Damian Whitworth wrote in The Times of London, recounting
how "suspicion, fear and panic spread like a virus" through the subways.
The Independent said, "There seems to be a state of denial about the
pervasive sense of fear that exists in London at the moment."
At the same time, British authorities are facing unusually frank criticism
from officials and leaders of some Muslim states.
Prince Turki al-Faisal, the Saudi ambassador, said in a radio interview on
Friday that it was a "true criticism" to say Britain had offered sanctuary
too easily. "Allowing them to go on using the hospitality and the generosity
of the British people to emanate from here such calls for killing and such I
think is wrong."
President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan also noted that some Islamic groups
banned in Pakistan "operate with impunity" in Britain.
Reporting for this article was contributed by Stephen Grey, Souad Mekhennet
and Hélène Fouquet in London, William K. Rashbaum in New York and Larry
Rohter in Rio de Janeiro.
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