
Eight arrested in two separate counter-terrorism investigations
Five men were arrested across England on suspicion of preparation of a terrorist act after police uncovered a suspected plot to target a single premises.
Four of the men arrested on Saturday were Iranian nationals and the nationality of the fifth is still being established, police said.
Separately, the Met Police said three Iranian men were arrested in London as part of a different Counter Terrorism Policing investigation.
In a statement on Sunday, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper thanked the police and security services for their action to 'keep our country safe'.
'I want to thank the police and our security services for the action they have taken to keep our country safe,' she said.
'Protecting national security is the first duty of government and our police and security services have our strong support in their vital work.
'These are serious events that demonstrate the ongoing requirement to adapt our response to national security threats.
'The government continues to work with police and intelligence agencies to support all the action and security assessments that are needed to keep the country safe.'
In the investigation where five people were arrested, four were detained under the Terrorism Act (TACT) 2006.
The fifth man was detained under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE).
The pre-planned arrests included a 29-year-old man in the Swindon area; a 46-year-old man in west London; a 29-year-old man in the Stockport area; a 40-year-old man in the Rochdale area; a fifth man in the Manchester area.
Counter Terrorism Police have been in contact with the site to make them aware of the suspected plot, and to provide relevant advice and support, the Met Police said in a statement.
The site has not been identified for operational reasons, they added.
Commander Dominic Murphy, who is head of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command, said: 'This is a fast-moving investigation and we are working closely with those at the affected site to keep them updated.
'The investigation is still in its early stages, and we are exploring various lines of inquiry to establish any potential motivation as well as to identify whether there may be any further risk to the public linked to this matter.
'We understand the public may be concerned and as always, I would ask them to remain vigilant and if they see or hear anything that concerns them, then to contact us.'
Officers are carrying out searches at a number of addresses in the Greater Manchester, London and Swindon areas in connection with the investigation.
In a separate counter-terrorism operation, the Met Police confirmed three Iranian men were arrested on Saturday.
Police said in a statement that Counter Terrorism Policing units had taken three men into custody in London.
Two of the men, aged 39 and 44 respectively, were arrested at separate addresses in north-west London.
A 55-year-old man was also apprehended at a third address, located in west London.
The London trio were arrested and detained under section 27 of the National Security Act 2023 and remain in custody.
Searches continue at the three addresses across London.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
27 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Essex police boss demands to meet Yvette Cooper over migrant hotel
A police boss has demanded an urgent meeting with Yvette Cooper on Monday to seek the closure of the Epping asylum hotel at the centre of recent protests. Roger Hirst, the police and crime commissioner for Essex, said The Bell Hotel was an inappropriate location for asylum seekers and was costing his force 'hundreds of thousands of pounds' in officer overtime to police the protests. Hundreds of officers from Essex, the Metropolitan Police and forces across England were deployed on Sunday to police about 1,000 protesters who converged on the hotel. Essex imposed restrictions on the protests that required pro and anti-migrant groups to be separated on designated sites and banned anyone from wearing face coverings. A dispersal order runs from 12pm on Sunday until 8am on Monday, covering Epping town centre and nearby transport hubs. It gives officers the power to remove anyone suspected of anti-social behaviour. The Bell has become a target for protests after a resident Ethiopian asylum seeker was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old schoolgirl days after arriving in the UK. Ten people have been arrested after violence flared 10 days ago. Mr Hirst said: 'The Bell is not the right place for a hotel for asylum seekers. It's in the middle of a home counties market town and these are people who have a very different life experience arriving there. There are schools in the vicinity as well. It is not the right place. 'It's costing hundreds of thousands of pounds. It's a lot of police overtime. This is not what we need to be happening on a regular basis in the town. It's a diversion of resources from what police officers should be doing.' It follows similar calls for the hotel's closure from Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader and Essex MP, and Chris Whitbread, the Epping council leader, who said it had become a 'focus and battleground' for extremist groups. Tommy Robinson, the political activist whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, said on his X account on July 20 that he was 'coming to Epping next Sunday ... and bringing thousands more with me', but did not make the journey. Around 400 anti-migrant protesters were the first to gather outside the hotel before counter-demonstrators comprising pro-Palestine groups, unions and anti-racism campaigners arrived around an hour later at 3pm and were directed to a field nearby. Officers from as many as 30 police forces are believed to have been involved including Merseyside, Surrey, Lancashire, the City of London and Sussex were in attendance. The counter-demonstrators signs included: 'Don't let the far-Right divide us with their hatred, ' while anti-migrant protesters chanted: 'Protect our kids,' and 'Keir Starmer is a w-----.' Sarah White, 40, one of the protest organisers, said she would continue demonstrations until the hotel closed. The mother of three said: 'We won't stop. Today has been a great opportunity for our voices to be heard. 'We've got the message out there that we don't want these hotels. This I think has been the biggest and there's more to come. We need to feel safe, we don't currently. It's shocking. We won't stop until that hotel is closed.' Maureen Chapman, 73, who has lived in Epping for 50 years, said she felt 'under threat'. She said: 'I have grandchildren living locally. We want this closed and we won't stop until it is. It's shocking.' Police said three people were arrested: a 52 year-old man on suspicion of a public order offence; a 53 year-old woman for racially aggravated abuse; and a 27 year-old woman on suspicion of criminal damage and a public order offence. In Canary Wharf, around 150 protesters gathered on Sunday near the Britannia International Hotel in London's financial district, to which the Home Office plans to send asylum seekers. The 'silent protest' had been scheduled to start near the four-star hotel at 3pm, with online graphics reading: 'Save our kids, stop the boats,' and 'Everyone welcome. Stand in unity, make your voice heard – silently.' Two men have been charged with public order offences after a protest outside a hotel in Diss, Norfolk Constabulary has said. They were arrested on Saturday after police reviewed footage from both sides of a protest that took place on Denmark Street on Monday, the force said. James Harvey, 22, of Linden Drive, Hethersett, has been charged with a racially aggravated public order offence. Luke Sharman, 23, of Harcourt Close, Norwich, has been charged with a racially aggravated public order offence and possession of cannabis.


The Herald Scotland
10 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
'I'll make 9/11 look like The Teletubbies' said accused man
The 24 year-old had been arrested after posting online a clip of him blowing up two gas canisters near the River Leven in Methil, Fife. Ross's home was raided and police discovered a drawing marked "Project Payback". Read More: A phone and tablet device were also examined which included the voice message about the 2001 Twin Towers atrocity and him discussing with others "murdering all the people who wronged you". Ross appeared in the dock this week at the High Court in Glasgow. He pled guilty to a charge of behaving in a threatening and abusive manner which included sending the concerning messages and voice notes on Snapchat and Facebook causing an explosion, filming it and putting the footage on social media between June 25 and July 31 2024. He had a not guilty plea to a charge under the Terrorism Act accepted. Ross was remanded in custody and will be sentenced at a later date. A Facebook friend of Ross had spotted the explosion video in late July 2024. He showed it to a young woman who was so "alarmed" she contacted police. Ross was held that day after being spotted in Methil. Detectives - along with Counter Terrorism officers - searched his home in the town. They found the "Project Payback" drawing along with a sketch of what was described as a "homemade explosive device". Inside a desk were various items including a roll of wire, mobile phone batteries, nails, screws and a watch. There were also initial fears about a package in the property which led to homes in the area being evacuated, but it did not contain an explosive. Prosecutor Greg Farrell said Ross "laughed" when first quizzed about what he had filmed claiming it was an "attempt at satire comedy". But, he confirmed that he had blew up two butane gas canisters and had posted it on his Facebook page under the name of a Batman comic villain. Mr Farrell: "He made reference to social media corrupting his decisions." Ross was asked about his interest in Kaczynski - captured in 1996 - and said he was "apparently some kind of mail bomber" that he had learned more about by going down a "rabbit hole" online. Ross went on to insist that he himself was "not a terrorist" as he had "made peace with everything in his life". But, police found a series of concerning messages during checks of his phone and black tablet. In late June 2024, he wrote to 15 users on Facebook Messenger: "Here guys, I am just here to inform you that the only thing stopping you from murdering all of the people who wronged you is just a box. "That is only if you cannot do it correctly and make sure enough evidence is gone so that the charges do not stick." He referred to "instructions on how to make a pipe bomb" adding: "Hope this comes in handy for you one day x". In messages on the day of the River Leven explosion, a social media contact called Ross "a human". Mr Farrell then told the court of a Snapchat conversation with a friend shortly before. Ross stated at one stage: "I am going to make 9/11 look like an episode of the Teletubbies, f*** sake." He then backtracked again claiming it was "satire comedy" and that he was "only joking". The friend replied: "F*** Islam, f*** them all." During further rants, Ross said he had been let down by the "justice system" moaning he had been treated differently because he is a man. In messages to another contact, he said: "I have realised that I simply cannot allow what is happening to humanity and our world to continue. "I can and will have an impact on preventing the worst from happening xx." The court heard there were also photos, videos and sketches of the "Unabomber" on the devices as well as images of a pipe bomb and firearms together with "various other clips which suggest violence". Lord Colbeck deferred sentencing for reports.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Home Secretary to make crowding more than 80 migrants into small boats a criminal offence – but critics say it'll do nothing to stem the tide
Yvette Cooper will use new laws to prosecute migrants who dangerously overcrowd small boats and put women and children at risk. The Home Secretary has ordered officials to expand the 'endangering lives at sea' offence, currently going through Parliament, to specifically include cases where up to 100 passengers can pack on to a single dinghy. It comes as the number of people per small boat has reached record levels this year, with insiders warning it is 'a matter of time' before one sinks from overcrowding. Ms Cooper is worried about women and children being 'crushed at sea' and told this newspaper: 'If you storm a boat, trampling over the bodies of tiny children, you are complicit in putting other people in danger.' She wants to use the new powers in the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill to tackle migrants who overcrowd the dinghies. But critics suggested the plan was 'pathetic tinkering' that will not make a difference in stemming the flow of illegal migrants to Britain. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'The only way we're going to stop the boats is to do what America are doing. Deport every single illegal immigrant upon arrival – either to their home country or a third country like Rwanda.' And The Mail on Sunday can reveal the second-most overcrowded boat crossed the Channel on July 18 – with 97 on board, including 22 women and 17 children. The dinghy spent around ten hours limping towards the Channel's midpoint before eventually being rescued by a Border Force catamaran. The number of boats carrying 80 or more people has spiked in the past six months, helped by French officials doing nothing to stop smugglers bringing 'taxi boats' close to shore. By contrast, five years ago the dinghies typically had about 15 on board, sources said, and smugglers have been driven by greed to cram more people on amid helpful calmer seas. In the six years since the small-boat crossings began, up to the end of April 2024, only 20 boats crossed with 80 or more people on board. There have been 50 such dinghies after that point, and more than a third of those have arrived in the past two months. Ms Cooper's proposals would allow the Government to prosecute anyone found to be enabling boat overcrowding, or endangering passengers' lives by refusing help from French lifeguards (which would involve them not crossing the Channel). A Home Office official said: 'If the smuggling gangs carry on cramming 80, 90 or even 100 people on to these flimsy dinghies, it is simply a matter of time before the bottom falls out of one of them, and we will see a mass casualty event in the Channel. 'We should not have to wait for that to happen before we take action, which is why we need to get this endangerment law on the statute books and start enforcing it against anyone responsible for putting the lives of women and children at risk.' Tony Smith, former director general of the Border Force, said that anything combatting the 'vile' people-smuggling trade was welcome. But he added the 'devil would be in the detail' of Ms Cooper's powers, warning that pilots of small boats try to conceal themselves among other migrants as their dinghies approach the authorities. All migrants who come to the UK on small boats breach the law of illegal arrival, but usually seek asylum immediately – which makes prosecution harder as they wait for their applications to be processed. Only 1 per cent of all those who entered illegally since Labour came to power have been charged. Ms Cooper is also pushing for French police to start targeting such boats at the moment when smugglers bring them to shore, and force migrants wading through water before boarding to turn back. The Home Secretary said: 'We won't stand by as lives are put at risk and our border security is so badly undermined. That is why we are making it much easier to prosecute those who act in this callous and dangerous way.' She added: 'Vile people smugglers are increasingly cramming more and more people into these flimsy boats to inflate their profits with no regard for the lives they put at risk. Women and children are put into the centre of the boats where we have even seen people crushed to death.' But Opposition frontbenchers claimed the plan would not be enough to tackle overcrowding. Mr Philp said: 'It's pathetic. A piece of tinkering that will make absolutely no difference whatsoever. The Government promised to smash the gangs but has totally failed to do that. The gangs are using bigger boats and cramming more in just so they can make more money. 'It is already a criminal offence to facilitate illegal immigration with a long prison sentence. They need to start enforcing that, not replicating existing legislation.'