Updated at 11:40 p.m. ET
The father and younger brother of suspected Manchester Arena suicide bomber Salman Abedi have been arrested in Libya.
In a statement
posted on Facebook
RADA also said their father, Ramadan Abedi, was taken into custody in Tripoli on Wednesday; he has been questioned but not charged.
Salman Abedi, 22, died in Monday's attack at the end of an Ariana Grande concert in England. He was reportedly born in the U.K. to Libyan parents who had fled the regime of Moammar Gadhafi. He is believed to have returned to the U.K. from a trip to Libya recently.
In a phone interview earlier Wednesday, Ramadan Abedi
told the Associated Press
News of the arrests came as authorities in England continue to investigate what they're calling a network behind the
bombing at a concert that had drawn girls and teenagers
Early Thursday morning in Manchester, police carried out
a controlled explosion
"I think it's very clear that this is a network that we are investigating," Greater Manchester Police Chief Ian Hopkins said in an update on the case. His remarks go a step further than previous statements, in which officials said they were trying to learn whether the attacker had the support of a larger group.
From Manchester, NPR's Frank Langfitt reports:
"In some of my conversations that I've had with people who are following this very closely, the feeling is that they were aware of the bomber, but they didn't think that he had the ability to pull off something like this, something of such sophistication and something so effective and deadly."
Manchester police say officers arrested six more people Wednesday as part of the investigation into the bombing, bringing the number of arrests to seven. The identities of those arrested and any charges against them have not been revealed.
The first person was taken into custody on Tuesday in Manchester.
Early Wednesday, police said three more men had been arrested "after police executed warrants in South Manchester" — the area of the city where the suspected suicide bomber is believed to have lived.
Police carried out another arrest that evening in Wigan, in western Manchester, where police say they apprehended a "man carrying a package which we are currently assessing."
Police later announced they had
arrested a woman
The seventh arrest came "at an address in Nuneaton, Warwickshire," Greater Manchester Police tweeted.
Authorities also raided an apartment near the University of Manchester in the city center, where officers armed with automatic weapons blew open a door.
"There's sort of ash and the smell of smoke," that resident, Adam Prince, tells Frank. "There's about eight officers sitting up there."
In
Monday night's attack
Those killed in the attack, which targeted a concert by a pop singer whose core fan group is young girls, include 8-year-old Saffie Rose Roussos. Other victims who have been identified range from teenagers to a Polish couple, Angelika and Marcin Klis, who came to the venue to pick up their daughters.
ISIS has issued a claim of responsibility for the bombing, but the level of the terrorist group's involvement isn't known.
The U.K. is now at its highest terrorist threat level of "critical" for the first time since 2007. As part of the security response, military personnel are being deployed to civilian areas to work alongside and bolster police.
The head of the U.K.'s National Counter Terrorism Policing unit, Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley,
says that using military troops
"The investigation into the terrorist attack in Manchester is large-scale, fast-moving and making good progress," Rowley said.
In London, police and security are being boosted, the Metropolitan Police Service
announced Wednesday
"We will do all we can to protect the capital that we serve at this unsettling time," said Cmdr. Jane Connors, who leads the London policing operation. "All our work is designed to make our city as hostile an environment as possible for terrorists to plan and operate."
The more prominent security presence in London will include armed officers who are supporting what the police call Project Servator. Here's the description they gave:
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