Seven additional people were taken into custody in Britain and Libya on Wednesday in connection with the suicide bombing that killed 22 people at a pop concert in Manchester, England, as officials examined the attacker’s possible ties to jihadis in the Middle East.

As Britain deployed hundreds of soldiers to the streets and the nation remained under “critical” alert for another possible terrorist attack, investigators searched several locations around England for evidence that might tie the English-born bomber, Salman Abedi, 22, to a larger terrorist network.



For the record: An earlier version of this article said the latest arrests included five men in the Manchester region. There were four men.

Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the attack, and new reports that Abedi had traveled to Libya and Syria, home to the militant group’s self-declared caliphate, probably raise serious red flags for investigators seeking to confirm whether the group managed to orchestrate a devastating attack inside Britain.

The nine people now in custody include two of Abedi’s brothers and his father, a Libyan security official who had fled to Britain as a dissident of the Moammar Kadafi government in the 1990s before returning in 2011. Salman and at least one of his brothers remained in England.


Before his arrest in Tripoli on Wednesday, the father, Ramadan Abedi, 51, had protested in an interview with the Associated Press that his son was innocent and had been preparing to go on a pilgrimage soon to Saudi Arabia.

“We don’t believe in killing innocents. This is not us,” said Abedi, who is an administrative manager of the Tripoli Central Security Force, which is aligned with Libya’s U.N.-backed government. “We aren’t the ones who blow up ourselves among innocents. We go to mosques. We recite Koran, but not that.”

Abedi said his son had sounded normal the last time he spoke to him. “There was nothing worrying at all until two days ago [when] I heard the news that they suspect he was the bomber.”

Salman Abedi’s younger brother, Hisham, also was arrested in Libya on Tuesday, according to a statement from the Libyan Special Deterrence Forces.


Hisham Abedi confessed that he belonged to Islamic State and was in Britain when his brother was preparing for the bombing and aware of his brother’s plans, said the statement on the force’s Facebook page. The pair remained in constant contact since Hisham left Britain on April 16, it said.

The Manchester bomber’s brother, Hisham Abedi, at the Tripoli-based Special Deterrence Forces anti-terrorism unit, which arrested him. (Ahmed Bin Salman / Associated Press)

Another of the bomber’s brothers, Ismail, was arrested in the Manchester area shortly after the Monday evening attack, but officials have not said why.

Security services continued to work around the clock to determine what motivated Abedi, who was born in Manchester, to blow himself up just outside the exits of the 21,000-seat Manchester Arena moments after American singer Ariana Grande had finished her packed concert. Grande, whose fans include legions of teenage girls, has since canceled her shows through June 5, which were to be held in London and Switzerland.


British Prime Minister Theresa May has raised the country’s threat level from “severe” to “critical,” indicating another attack might be imminent, marking the first time in 10 years that the nation had reached the highest possible threat level.

Armed soldiers were visible at key locations around the country Wednesday, including outside Downing Street, the houses of Parliament and Buckingham Palace.

Authorities said as many as a thousand soldiers were mobilizing to assist armed police and help protect key locations such as airports, transport hubs and nuclear plants.

But political leaders already were preparing to resume campaigning on Thursday and Friday for parliamentary elections set for June 8.


“The spirit of Manchester — and the spirit of Britain — is far mightier than the sick plots of depraved terrorists,” May said after meeting with her security chiefs.

The latest arrests in Britain include four men and one woman in the Manchester region, plus one man in Nuneaton, a town outside Birmingham about halfway between London and Manchester. Officials have not released names or given details about the accusations against the suspects.

Given the nature of the attack and the bomb used — filled with nails and bolts designed to cause maximum carnage — Home Secretary Amber Rudd said Wednesday that it was likely the 22-year-old had not acted alone.

“It was more sophisticated than some of the attacks we’ve seen before,” she said.


News that Abedi had traveled to Syria came from France’s interior minister, Gerard Collomb, who told BFMTV that the bomber had proven links to Islamic State.

“Today we only know what British investigators have told us — someone of British nationality, of Libyan origin, who suddenly after a trip to Libya, then probably to Syria, becomes radicalized and decides to carry out this attack,” he said.

Much of the information about the Manchester investigation has come from law enforcement sources outside Britain who have been briefed by their British counterparts. The leaks have irritated officials in Britain, where such investigative information is not shared with the media as commonly as it is in the U.S.

“The British police have been very clear that they want to control the flow of information in order to protect operational integrity, the element of surprise,” Rudd said. “So it is irritating if it gets released from other sources, and I have been very clear with our friends that should not happen again.”


1 / 33 St. Ann’s Square in Manchester, England, is full of tributes Wednesday for the people who lost their lives during the terrorist attack at a nearby pop concert on Monday night. (Andy Rain / European Pressphoto Agency) 2 / 33 A memorial grows in central Manchester. (Andy Rain / European Pressphoto Agency) 3 / 33 People pause in front of candles set up in Albert Square in Manchester, England. (Ben Stansall / AFP/Getty Images) 4 / 33 Fawaz Al Haffar, center, Manchester Islamic Centre and Disbury Mosque trustee, speaks to the news media Wednesday. (Oli Scarff / AFP/Getty Images) 5 / 33 A soldier and police officer patrol outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Wednesday. Nearly a thousand military personnel are being deployed around the country as the UK terror status is elevated to critical in the wake of the terrorist attack at Manchester Arena. (Carl Court / Getty Images) 6 / 33 Members of the public pause to look at floral tributes and messages in St Ann’s Square in Manchester. (Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images) 7 / 33 Manchester City Council workers move the floral tributes from Albert Square to St Ann’s Square on Wednesday. (Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images) 8 / 33 A woman hugs a girl wearing a T-shirt from Ariana Grande’s Dangerous Woman tour near Albert Square in Manchester. (Chris J Ratcliffe / AFP/Getty Images) 9 / 33 Messages of unity at Manchester’s Albert Square on Tuesday, the day after the deadly attack at a pop concert. (Ben Stansall / AFP/Getty Images) 10 / 33 A woman lights candles set up in front of floral tributes in Albert Square on Tuesday. (Ben Stansall / AFP/Getty Images) 11 / 33 Police officers on Tuesday add to the flowers in Manchester’s St. Ann’s Square for the victims of a deadly explosion at the nearby Manchester Arena. (Martin Rickett / Associated Press) 12 / 33 Messages are among the tributes left at a growing memorial in St. Ann’s Ann Square in Manchester, England. (Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images) 13 / 33 Ariana Grande concert attendees Vikki Baker and her 13-year-old daughter, Charlotte, leave the Park Inn, where they were given refuge after the explosion at Manchester Arena. (Christopher Furlong / Getty Images) 14 / 33 Police stand guard Tuesday near Manchester Arena, where 22 people were killed in a suicide bombing at an Ariana Grande concert the night before. (Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images) 15 / 33 Forensic officers work the scene at Manchester Arena on Tuesday. (Dave Thompson / Getty Images) 16 / 33 Police on patrol in Manchester, England, the day after the explosion. (Andy Rain / European Pressphoto Agency) 17 / 33 Tributes are being left in St. Ann’s Square in Manchester, England. (Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images) 18 / 33 Workers hug each other after being evacuated from the Arndale Centre shopping mall in Manchester on Tuesday following a security alert. (Ben Stansall / AFP/Getty Images) 19 / 33 People sit under a billboard in Manchester city center on Tuesday. (Kirsty Wigglesworth / Associated Press) 20 / 33 Police stand behind a cordoned off area near Manchester Arena on Tuesday. (Nigel Roddis / European Pressphoto Agency) 21 / 33 A man embraces a woman and a teenager on Tuesday as he collects them from the Park Inn Hotel, where they were given refuge after the explosion at Manchester Arena. (Christopher Furlong / Getty Images) 22 / 33 Concert-goers are escorted away from Manchester Arena, where Ariana Grande had performed. (Christopher Furlong / Getty Images) 23 / 33 An injured man is helped from the Manchester Arena. (Rex Features via Associated Press) 24 / 33 Police and other emergency services gather near Manchester Arena. (Joel Goodman / London News Picture ) 25 / 33 Police block a road to Manchester Arena after the explosion. (Rui Vieira / Associated Press) 26 / 33 Police and others help the injured near Manchester Arena. (Joel Goodman / London News Picture ) 27 / 33 Police stand guard at the scene of a suspected terrorist attack in Manchester, England. (Paul Ellis / AFP/Getty Images) 28 / 33 Emergency services personnel speak to people outside Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion at the venue Monday night. (Peter Byrne / Associated Press) 29 / 33 Police stand by a cordoned-off street close to the Manchester Arena on Monday night following an explosion after an Ariana Grande concert. (Dave Thompson / Getty Images) 30 / 33 Armed police stand guard at Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion after an Ariana Grande concert. (Peter Byrne / Associated Press) 31 / 33 Armed police at Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion at the venue during an Ariana Grande concert Monday night. (Peter Byrne / Associated Press) 32 / 33 Armed police and ambulances at Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion at the venue during an Ariana Grande concert Monday night. (Peter Byrne / Associated Press) 33 / 33 Emergency services work at Manchester Arena after reports of an explosion during an Ariana Grande concert. (Peter Byrne / Associated Press)

Rudd said that Abedi had been known to intelligence services “up to a point” and that his recent trips to Libya, where his parents live, are being investigated.

Hamid El-Sayed, an employee at the University of Manchester, told the BBC that Abedi’s family had tried but failed to keep him on the “right path.”

“Eventually he was doing very bad at his university, at his education, and he didn’t complete, and they tried to take him back to Libya several times,” El-Sayed said. “He had difficulties adjusting to European lifestyle.”


Fawzi Haffar, a trustee of the Manchester Islamic Center and Didsbury Mosque, denied news reports that Abedi had worked there in the past.

“This is not true. I assure everyone. Listeners, viewers in the U.K., around the U.K., this bomber has never worked in this center,” he said.

Haffar did not directly answer questions about whether Abedi and his father prayed at the mosque, which also has been alleged, although a prayer leader at the mosque told The Times that he had seen the bomber at the mosque previously.

“This center has been part of our fine and great city and the Didsbury community,” Haffar said. “This has been going on since the 1960s. The doors of the center are open to all.”


He pleaded with anyone with any information about Abedi to contact the police without delay and expressed concern about reports he was receiving of a rise in anti-Muslim acts in recent days, ranging from verbal abuse to criminal damage of mosques.

“These incidents have to be reported as hate crimes,” he said.

As the identities of the victims became public, the indiscriminate toll of the bombing became clearer.

Among those killed: an 8-year-old girl, an aunt who relatives said shielded her niece from the blast, parents waiting to pick up young concertgoers and a Polish couple from York, a city in the north of England.


An off-duty female police officer also was killed.

And Olivia Campbell, 15, whose mother, Charlotte, had put out a desperate and heartbreaking plea for information about her daughter’s whereabouts on Monday, was finally confirmed among the dead.

“Go sing with the angels and keep smiling. Mummy loves you so much,” Charlotte Campbell wrote on Facebook.

In a week of memorials, another vigil was being held Wednesday evening, this one in the Bury district of Manchester. It was for one of the victims who lived in the area, John Atkinson, 26 — and for Olivia.


Police said they are now confident they know the identity of all 22 victims in Manchester, but autopsies will take four to five days because of the number of cases.

Sixty-four people are being treated in hospitals across Manchester, 20 of whom are dealing with life-changing injuries, including “major wounds, damage to organs, embedded objects,” said Jon Rouse, chief officer of the Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership.

In one of a string of public events that were resuming under heavy caution, the Manchester United soccer team announced it would play the Europa League final Wednesday night, although players were said to still be deeply shocked by recent events.

Players will wear black armbands and hold a minute of silence, and somber fans plan to unveil a massive banner reading, “Manchester — a city united #prayforManchester.”


Campaigning for the June elections had been suspended, but the leader of the UK Independence Party announced Wednesday it would release a party manifesto on Thursday, and the Labor Party is likely to return to the campaign trail Friday but in a low-key fashion.

“The best response we can make is to ensure that the democratic process continues,” said Paul Nuttall, leader of the UK Independence Party. “It is by prolonging the disruption to normality that we allow the terrorists to win. Politics has never been more important; politicians must deal with these issues.”

There was no indication that any of the other main parties planned to resume campaigning anytime soon.

Special correspondents Boyle reported from London and Kelly from Manchester, and staff writer Pearce reported from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Melissa Etehad contributed.


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UPDATES:

6:27 p.m.: This article was updated with more details from a statement from the Libyan Special Deterrence Force, including what it said was a confession from the bomber’s brother.

3:45 p.m.: The article was updated with additional details on new arrests.

1 p.m.: This article was updated with comments from Muslim community leaders in Manchester.


11:20 a.m.: This article was updated with news that the bomber’s father has been arrested in Libya.

10:20 a.m.: This article was updatedwith news of a fifth arrest in the investigation.

9:10 a.m.: This article was updated throughout with staff reporting.

7:23 a.m.: This article was updated with the police chief’s comment and an interview with suspect Salman Abedi’s father.


3:30 a.m.: This article was updated with more background on the men in custody.

This article was originally published at 2:40 a.m.