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Police were holding eight people on Tuesday, at least four of them foreign doctors, over a suspected al Qaeda plot against Britain that triggered a manhunt reaching as far as Australia.
One British security source said two of the suspects were Indian, the rest were Middle Eastern and "quite a few" were doctors - a contrast with recent British conspiracies led by "home-grown" militants, often with modest academic backgrounds.
Two of those arrested worked at hospitals in England, one was a doctor in Scotland and Australian police also detained an Indian doctor, Mohamed Haneef, under counter-terrorism laws. Police sources said the other suspects also had medical links.
The discovery of two car bombs primed to explode in London's bustling theatre and night-club district last Friday put a city already attacked by four suicide bombers in 2005 on edge.
When a fuel-laden jeep rammed into a Scottish airport the next day, Britain's threat level was raised to its highest level, "Critical", meaning more attacks might be imminent. "The next phase of investigation is focusing now on the international aspects," a security source said, adding British intelligence was providing regular updates to foreign partners.
He said it was too early to identify the ringleader of the alleged plot, adding: "We don't know enough to say whether they were radicalised here or overseas, or how they met."
Two more men were arrested on Tuesday in northern England but police said it was too early to link them to the plot. A local newspaper said they were held after 10 gas canisters, similar to those found in the cars, were delivered to a housing block.
TEST FOR BROWN:
The attacks pose a stern test for Prime Minister Gordon Brown, a Scot who replaced Tony Blair last week and has come under some pressure to withdraw British troops from Iraq.
Britain has seen a marked increase in terrorism-related plots since the September 11 strikes on the United States and its decision to join US forces in invading Iraq in 2003. Muslim leaders praised the government for its "calm and reassuring tone" in handling the crisis and said they recognised there was a problem of extremism in their community.
"Those who engage in such murderous actions and those that provide support for them are the enemies of all, Muslim and non-Muslims, and they stand against our shared values in the UK," said Muhammad Abdul Bari, secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain.
In its statements, the government has not singled out Britain's large Muslim community, nor called for tough new security measures - a contrast with Blair's administration. However, fears of a backlash against Muslims in Scotland rose after attackers rammed a car into an Asian-owned shop in Glasgow and set it ablaze. The shop was burned out.
Fearing more attacks by militants, police have banned cars from driving right up to airport terminals. With Britons on alert and security beefed up at transport hubs, there have been a number of security scares. Thousands of passengers were evacuated from Terminal 4 at London's Heathrow Airport as police investigated a suspicious package. It reopened later but British Airways said it was forced to cancel 108 flights to the United States and Europe.
In Scotland, police have carried out four controlled explosions at a hospital linked to at least one of those arrested and at a mosque in the biggest city, Glasgow. Police said they were still looking for other suspects. "It's still an active inquiry. The threat level remains at 'critical' and, until we know for sure, that will probably remain the same," a police source said.
Previous attacks, including one on London's transport system in 2005 that killed 52 people, have mainly involved disaffected British-born Muslims, not educated professionals from overseas. Of the other doctors held over the plot, British police sources named one as Bilal Abdulla, who qualified in Iraq in 2004, and another as Mohammed Asha, a Jordanian who qualified the same year. Asha's wife was also arrested.
The security source said there was no indication that specialised medical knowledge played any part in the plot: "There seems to be no terrorist gain from their profession." In Amman, Jordan, Asha's father described his son as a good Muslim and dismissed suggestions that he could be involved in an al Qaeda-style bomb plot. "I am sure Mohammed does not have any links of this nature," he said.

Copyright Reuters, 2007

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