Sajda Mughal, 33, was on the Underground that morning when a bomb exploded. — -- Ten years ago, 52 people were killed and more than 700 injured in multiple terrorism attacks across London. Sajda ...
Four explosions killed 52 people and injured nearly 800 others on the London Underground in 2005 On July 7, 2005, four bombs went off on the London Underground The explosions — which happened on two ...
The normalcy of London, marked by people rushing to work and the usual city buzz, was shattered on July 7, 2005. In a series of devastating, coordinated suicide bombings across the capital’s public ...
All four were travelling to London, where Lindsay, Tanweer, and Khan headed for the tube lines and let off their explosives. Six people were killed by the bomb at Edgeware, while seven more were ...
The death toll from yesterday's bombings has reached 50, but Londoners are back riding trains and buses and telling reporters that "life must go on." Investigators say the explosives were set off by ...
July 18, 2005 — -- Mohammed Sadique Khan, 30, is the eldest of the bombers and the suspected field commander in the London attacks. A picture of Khan is now emerging of a man who traveled ...
FILE - The wreckage of a double-decker bus with its top blown off by a bomb and damaged cars scattered on the road at Tavistock Square in central London, July 7, 2005. (AP Photo/Sang Tan, File) LONDON ...
The Muslim Council of Britain today condemned last week's transit bombings in London and what it calls "the evil deeds [that] make victims of us all." The Council says it has spoken to Islamic ...
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Twenty years ago, four suicide bombers attacked London’s transit system and killed over 50 people. The tragedy sent the city into chaos and sparked a nationwide investigation. Police later learned ...