U.S. investigators hunt for clues in marathon bombing
Officials said more than 100 people were
wounded by the devices, which were packed with gunpowder and shrapnel to
maximise injuries, according a senior law enforcement official briefed
on the investigation who declined to be named.
"I
saw people who looked like they had their legs blown off. There was a
lot of blood over their legs. Then people were being pushed in
wheelchairs," said Joe Anderson, 33, a fisherman from Pembroke,
Massachusetts, who had just run the race holding a large U.S. flag.
Some
victims would require further surgery in the coming days, said Peter
Fagenholz, a trauma surgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital.
"We're
seeing a lot of shrapnel injuries" from small metal debris, Fagenholz
told reporters outside the hospital. Doctors treated 29 people, of whom
eight were in a critical condition.
An
eight-year-old boy was among the dead, the Boston Globe reported,
citing two law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation. A
two-year-old was being treated at Boston Children's Hospital for a head
wound, the hospital said.
White
House officials and investigators said it was too early to say whether
the Boston attacks were carried out by a foreign or homegrown group or
to identify a motive.
The attack
was the worst bombing on American soil since far-right militant and U.S.
citizen Timothy McVeigh set off a massive truck bomb that destroyed the
Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995, killing 168 people.
Two
years earlier, Islamist militants bombed the twin towers of the World
trade Center, killing six people and wounding more than 1,000.
President
Barack Obama said those responsible would "feel the full weight of
justice" and the White House said it was handling the incident as "an
act of terror".
The Federal Bureau
of Investigation was leading the manhunt on Tuesday, alongside battery
of federal, state and local law enforcement agencies.
"It
is a criminal investigation that is a potential terrorist
investigation," said Richard DesLauriers, the FBI special agent in
charge for Boston.
Agents searched an apartment in the Boston suburb of Revere late on Monday, local media reported but did not elaborate.
MAJOR CITIES ON ALERT
Many
runners were heading for the finish some four hours into the race when
the first bomb detonated, sending up a fireball and smoke from behind
cheering spectators and a row of flags representing the countries of
participants.
World-class runners
had long finished the race but the initial blast, followed moments later
by a second, caught scores of other competitors and spectators.
The
blasts put police on alert in major cities across the United States,
including in Washington, D.C., and New York City, sites of the September
11 attacks.
The annual Boston
Marathon, held since 1897, attracts an estimated half-million spectators
and some 20,000 participants every year.
Organizers
in the British capital said the London Marathon would go ahead on
Sunday despite the Boston attack, but security was being reviewed.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel Joined world leaders in condemning the blasts.
"Nothing
can justify such an insidious attack on people who had come together
for a peaceful sports event. I hope that the person or people guilty (of
this attack) can be brought to justice," she said in a statement
(Reporting by Scott Malone; Aditional reporting by Reporting by Pritha
Sarkar, Patrick Johnston, Martyn Herman and David Cutler in London and
Gareth Jones in Berlin; Writing by Andrew Heavens; Editing by Jon Boyle)
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