進(jìn)入英語學(xué)習(xí)論壇下載音頻 去聽寫專區(qū)一展身手
Their first suspect in custody, Yemeni police continued to search for the terrorists believed responsible for mailing a pair of powerful bombs to attack the United States. US and Yemeni officials were increasingly seeing al-Qaida's hand in the failed plot.
Yemeni police arrested a young woman who was a medical student on suspicion of mailing the bombs, which were powerful enough to take down airplanes, officials said on Sunday. They also detained her mother.
Investigators were hunting the Middle Eastern country for more conspirators. US officials included in that group the same bomb maker suspected of designing the explosive for a failed bombing on a Detroit-bound airliner last Christmas.
Authorities were also looking at two language institutions the plotters may have been associated with.
The explosives, addressed to Chicago-area synagogues, were pulled off airplanes in England and the United Arab Emirates early on Friday morning, touching off a tense search for other devices. More details emerged on Saturday about the plot, which exploited security gaps in the worldwide shipping system.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said he believes the explosive device found in central England was intended to detonate on the plane, while British Home Secretary Theresa May said the bomb was powerful enough to take down the aircraft.
A US official said the second device found in Dubai was thought to be similarly potent.
But it still wasn't clear whether the bombs, which officials said were wired to cell phones, timers and power supplies, could have been detonated remotely while the planes were in the air, or when the packages were halfway around the world in the US.
Still, the fact that they made it onto airplanes showed that nearly a decade since the Sept 11 attacks, terrorists continue to probe and find security vulnerabilities.
Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh told reporters that the US and the United Arab Emirates had provided intelligence that helped identify the woman suspected of mailing the packages.
A Yemeni security official said the young woman was a medical student and that her mother also was detained, but officials pointed to additional suspects believed to have used forged documents and ID cards. One member of Yemen's anti-terrorism unit said the other suspects had been tied to al-Qaida.
Yemeni and US officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the ongoing investigation unfolding on three continents.
Al-Qaida's Yemen branch claimed responsibility for the failed bomb last Christmas that used PETN, an industrial explosive also in the mail bombs found on Friday.
The suspected bomb maker behind the Christmas Day attack, Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri, is also the prime suspect in the mail bomb plot, several US officials said. Al-Asiri also helped make another PETN device for a failed suicide attempt against Saudi Arabia's counter-terrorism chief last year. The official survived, but the attacker died in the blast.
The US was already on the lookout for a mail bomb plot after learning terrorists in Yemen were interested in "exploring an operation involving cargo planes", a US counter-terrorism official said.
Questions:
1. Where were the two bombs found?
2. What was the set target for the bombings?
3. Who was thought to be behind the attack?
Answers:
1. Dubai, England
2. Chicago Synagogues
3. Ibrahim Hassan al-Asiri
(中國(guó)日?qǐng)?bào)網(wǎng)英語點(diǎn)津 Helen 編輯)
Todd Balazovic is a reporter for the Metro Section of China Daily. Born in Mineapolis Minnesota in the US, he graduated from Central Michigan University and has worked for the China Daily for one year.