British police have identified the man thought to be the mastermind behind last week’s bombings in London in which at least 52 people died, a report said on Thursday.
The British-born man in his 30s, of Pakistani origin, arrived at a British port last month and left the country again the day before Thursday’s attacks, The Times newspaper reported.
The four suspected suicide bombers, three of whom have been identified by newspapers, were also Britons of Pakistani origin.
According to newspapers, security sources believe the mastermind was involved in previous terror operations and has links with followers of Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda extremist group in the United States.
He is thought to have visited the bombers in their home city of Leeds, northern England, and identified targets on the London underground rail subway system where three of the four bombs exploded, the paper said.
Security sources also said he was likely to have trained the recruits in how to trigger their rucksack-carried bombs, three of which went off almost simultaneously at around 8:50am (7.50am GMT), at the peak of last Thursday’s morning rush hour.
Police have reportedly switched their investigation towards seeking the mastermind of the bombings since learning that the four bombers killed themselves in the attacks.
Home Secretary Charles Clarke said earlier on Wednesday that the aim was now ”to attack the people who are driving, organising and manipulating” bombers.
According to The Times newspaper on Thursday, police are also
seeking a possible fifth member of the bombers’ terror cell, who was also seen at Luton station, north of London, from where the attackers travelled into the capital.
The man, also believed to be of Pakistani origin, could still be at large in London, the paper said.
Police additionally want to interview an Egyptian-born university lecturer who was teaching in Leeds until a few weeks ago.
According to The Sun newspaper, the man, who it named as 33-year-old Magdi El-Nashar, was studying for a biochemistry doctorate at Leeds University and disappeared just before the attacks, it is thought to Egypt.
At least two of the bombers had links to his rented flat, which is one of six addresses in and around Leeds raided by police on Tuesday morning, the report added.
New raids
Meanwhile, British police on Wednesday carried out raids in the town of Aylesbury, just north of London, police and a report said on Wednesday.
A spokesman for Thames Valley Police said ”an ongoing operation” was taking place in Aylesbury, but that he could not confirm whether it was connected to the London attacks. – Sapa-AFP