08:50: Initial reports of an incident between
Liverpool Street and
Aldgatetube stations, either an explosion or a collision between trains. The reports from the two stations were initially thought to relate to two separate incidents
08:50: Explosion on a train between
King's Cross and
Russell Square tube stations. Eyewitnesses report explosion appeared to come from outside the train (this explosion was initially reported to have happened at 08:56).
08:50: Explosion on train at
Edgware Road tube station (this explosion was initially reported to have happened at 09:17).
09:28:
Metronet, the private consortium responsible for maintaining Tube infrastructure, says the incident was caused by some sort of power surge.
09:33: Reports of an incident at Edgware Road tube station. Reports that passengers on a train hit by an explosion attempted to break windows with umbrellas in order to escape.
12:05: Prime Minister
Tony Blair speaks out on the incident, calling the attacks a coordinated series of 'barbaric'
terrorist attacks.
17:30: Having flown back from
Scotland, from the
G8 Summit, Prime Minister Tony Blair emerges from a meeting in Downing Street and urges the public not to 'be terrorized'.
18:13: Deputy Assistant Police Commissioner
Brian Paddick confirms 37 fatalities: two in the bus explosion at Upper Woburn Place/Tavistock Square, seven at Liverpool Street/Aldgate, seven at Edgware Road, and twenty-one in the King's Cross/Russell Square blast, as well as around seven hundred injuries, with roughly three hundred of those being transported by ambulance to London hospitals.
21:40: The Metropolitan Police announce that a person injured in one of the blasts has since died in hospital care.
8 July 2005
11:00: Metropolitan Police press conference. Confirmed that there are four blast sites - three on the underground and one on the bus - not six as briefly thought. Gives update on casualties: "The number of deaths stands at more than 50. There were 700 casualties, 350 of whom were treated at the scene, 350 of whom have been treated at hospital. 22 people are in a serious condition in hospital and one person has since died."1
15:30: Police Commissioner Ian Blair and
Mayor of LondonKen Livingstone hold press conference. Confirm total of thirteen people killed in Tavistock Square bomb.2
19:30: After a security alert, Police evacuate
Birmingham city centre.
12 July 2005
06:30: Having identified three suspects from
CCTV footage, a missing person's report and documents found in the debris at each bomb site, armed police and army bomb disposal experts conduct three raids in the Beeston and Holbeck areas of
Leeds and two in nearby
Dewsbury, in
West Yorkshire. The Metropolitan Police lead this operation, working in conjunction with West Yorkshire Police.[1][2]
11:30: Up to 600 residents are evacuated from the area of a sixth raid, in the
Burley area of Leeds. Residents are unable to return to their homes for two days following the confirmation that explosives have been found at the site.[3]
13:20: A controlled explosion is carried out at the site of the raid in Burley.
Luton Railway Station is closed as police investigate a car parked there and believed to be associated with the suspects caught on CCTV cameras. After a series of controlled explosions the car is taken away for further examination.
13 July 2005
A raid by police and bomb disposal experts takes place at a house in
Aylesbury in
Buckinghamshire, after the identification of a fourth suspect.
04:30:
Yasin Hassan Omar, suspected of the failed attack at Warren Street on 21 July 2005, along with 3 other men, is arrested in
Heybarnes Road,
Birmingham. He was carrying a rucksack when he was arrested and, after resisting arrest, was hit with a
Taserstun gun. Later he is taken to
London for questioning by the Police.[6]
29 July 2005
11:30: Of the other three suspected attempted suicide bombers allegedly linked to the 21 July explosions, two are arrested in London. On that same day,
Hussain Osman, the fourth suspect, is arrested in
Rome.[7]