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Warnings
of an imminent terrorist attack on London’s Tube network were a ‘hoax’, say
police. This follows the raising of the UK’s terror threat level from
‘substantial’ to ‘severe’ on Friday in response to the domestic threat posed by
ISIS.
Circulated
by text and social media over the weekend, the message claimed to cite leaked
information suggesting police were readying themselves for a substantial
terrorist attack on the London Underground, which was targeted in the 7/7
attacks of 2005.
The
message read, “They think
there’s a terror threat and that it will happen on the tubes tomorrow around
the west end area [sic]. So don't go travelling on tubes!! It's better to be
safe than sorry. Please share.”
It
continued: “every single police
officer in the met has been called into work from 4am onwards.”
A
Metropolitan Police spokesman reassured the public that the message was a
“definite hoax” and said that it has been in circulation since Friday, meaning
the attack predicted would have occurred on Saturday.
“These rumors
are not uncommon,” he added. “The only thing that
gives them any credence is people re-tweeting them and circulating them.”
Prime Minister David Cameron, who
will make a statement in the Commons on Monday detailing new anti-terror
legislation, said on Friday that the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) poses
a “greater and deeper threat to our security than we’ve seen before.”
Britain is thought to be facing an
acute risk of such a terror attack in light of ongoing bloodshed in Iraq and
Syria. The ‘severe’ threat level is the second most serious.
The upgraded alert was put in place
by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre (JTAC) – a subset of Britain’s Security
Service (MI5) dedicated to analyzing intelligence relating to global terrorism.
According to MI5, Britain has not faced such a serious risk of terrorist
attacks since 2011.
In a public statement, Home
Secretary Theresa May said the “increase in the threat level is related to
developments in Syria and Iraq where terrorist groups are planning attacks
against the West.”
“Some of these plots are likely to
involve foreign fighters who have traveled there from the UK and Europe to take
part in those conflicts”, she added.
While a minority of Britons shared the hoax
message over the weekend, many more took to social media to make light of the
government’s heightened warnings, devising their own threat levels.
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