London/New Delhi: A car bomb exploded in Glasgow, but this time unlike explosion that took place on Saturday, the explosives were set off by the police in what they called the controlled explosion.
A car was found outside a mosque near the venue of the India-Pakistan cricket match.
Meanwhile an Indian link has been found to the UK terror investigation. An Indian national was one of the two to be quizzed in Australia over the weekend’s failed car bombings.
The 27-year-old Indian was arrested at Brisbane airport trying to fly back to India when he was arrested by Australia’s anti terrorism police.
Sources say that he is named Mohammad Haneef, who had trained in India as a doctor, then worked in Liverpool before he joined a hospital in Queensland hospital as a registrar nine months ago.
Says Australian Prime Minister, John Howard, “He has not been arrested. No charges have been laid. The police is questioning him in a normal way.”
The police are questioning Haneef's colleagues at Gold Coast hospital. His colleagues told them that he was almost a model citizen with excellent references.
UK intelligence narrowed down on him after his sim card was reportedly found on a Jordanian- born man named Dr Mohammad Asha, one of the seven arrested in Britain so far.
A few hours later, the British media reported the arrest of another Indian doctor in Liverpool. He reportedly worked at the same hospital as Haneef.
This is the first time that foreign doctors all of them working with the National Health Service (NHS) have become suspects in a terror plot. The Indian Government however, has not reacted to the reports.
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