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The Washington Times Online Edition

Two terror suspects arrested in East London

LONDON — Police shot and wounded a man during a raid in East London early yesterday and arrested him and another man on suspicion of terrorism.

Neighbors said police — some in hazardous-materials suits — quietly moved into the ethnically mixed neighborhood before dawn and surrounded the home of a man, his wife and their four teenage children. The neighbors described seeing a man in a bloodstained T-shirt being carried out of the house.

The man who was shot was hospitalized with injuries that were not life-threatening, officials said.

Deborah Glass of the Independent Police Complaints Commission said a single shot had been fired.

Anti-Terrorist Branch head Peter Clarke said police planned the raid to protect the public “from firearms or from hazardous substances” after receiving “very specific” intelligence. Neighbors said the area was swarmed by police in protective gear. A member of the Metropolitan Police Authority said officers wore suits to protect against chemicals and radioactivity.

Metropolitan Police said the wounded man, 23, was suspected of instigating, preparing and committing terrorist acts.

Another man, 20, was arrested at the house under the Terrorism Act and held at the high-security Paddington Green police station.

Two others in the house during the raid were treated, possibly for shock, and released from a hospital, a police spokeswoman said.

Dimple Hirani, 21, who lives nearby, said she saw “loads of police and loads of vans.” The police had special uniforms, gloves and equipment, she said.

Shopkeeper Salim Mala said the streets were sealed off when he arrived for work and plainclothes police and officers wearing protective suits were combing the area.

Some neighbors said the family in the house had lived for years in the neighborhood, a mixture of Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Eastern European and British residents.

The raid followed discussions between the Security Service, the police Anti-Terrorist Branch and biochemical specialists from the Health Protection Agency, police said.

Police declined to describe the intelligence that prompted the raid, and said an examination of the house could continue for several days.

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