Thursday, May 25, 2017

Police investigating the Manchester Arena bomb attack have stopped sharing information with the US after leaks to the media, the BBC understands.

Possible detonator and backpack remnants
UK authorities were offended when photographs seeming to show trash from the assault showed up in the New York Times.

It came after the name of plane Salman Abedi was spilled to US media 24 hours after the assault, which killed 22 - including youngsters - and harmed 64.

Theresa May is to raise worries with Donald Trump at a Nato meeting later.

More noteworthy Manchester Police would like to resume ordinary knowledge connections - a two-path stream of data - soon yet is at present "incensed", the BBC gets it.

In all out eight men are presently in care taking after the assault, done by Manchester-conceived Abedi, a 22-year-old from a group of Libyan root.

It has likewise developed two individuals who had known Abedi at school made separate calls to a hotline to caution the police about his radical perspectives.

Pictures of trash

Home Secretary Amber Rudd had said she was "disturbed" by the revelation of Abedi's character against the UK's desires and had cautioned Washington "it ought not occur once more".

Be that as it may, the photos of flotsam and jetsam - which seem to demonstrate bloodstained parts from the bomb and the rucksack used to hide it - were along these lines spilled to the New York Times, provoking an irate reaction from inside Whitehall and from UK police boss.

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