Annan condemns London bombings

Published: 8 July 2005 y., Friday

United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan has condemned the deadly bombings that killed at least 33 people and injured more than 340 in London.

He has called them "an attack on humanity itself" and has expressed solidarity with the British Government and people.

"I was devastated by the atrocious bombings that struck London today," the UN chief, who was on his way to the summit of the world's most powerful leaders in Scotland, said in a statement.

"These vicious acts have cut us all to the core, for they are an attack on humanity itself.

"Today the world stands shoulder to shoulder with the British people, who with others around the world had mobilised so powerfully against poverty and climate change ahead of the Group of Eight summit, and who, I am sure, will confront this ordeal with the same spirit, courage and determination," he said.

Šaltinis: AFP
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

“Difficult test” awaits Bolivia say election observers

A group of MEPs acting as election observers have given a cautious welcome to a constitutional referendum in Bolivia that gives more power to indigenous peoples. more »

Inmates injured in Mexico jail riot

Prison riots are no rarity in Mexico in recent times. more »

Re-thinking Europe's gas supplies after the Russia/Ukraine crisis

Cold homes and closed business due to gas shortages across much of Central and Eastern Europe in January thanks to the Russia-Ukraine gas dispute has prompted a re-think of supplies. more »

BBC resists pressure over Gaza

The BBC is facing a storm of criticism over its refusal to screen a charity appeal for Gaza. more »

France/Spain assess storm damage

People across south-western France and northern Spain are struggling to cope in the aftermath of a powerful storm that killed 15 people. more »

Al Qaeda leader threatens UK

Britain is to blame for the recent war in Gaza - that's the view of a prominent al Qaeda leader who's just published an angry warning to the UK. more »

Europe thaws out

Gas supplies are now getting through, ending the disruption that left millions of European households without heat during 13 days of bitter cold and forced thousands of schools and factories to close. more »

Israel completes pullout

Israel says it's done pulling out from the Gaza Strip. more »

Protestors target PM's car

Crowds swelled to more than a thousand outside the Iceland‘s parliament building as they demanded the government resign. more »

Eyewitnesses in Gaza

After 3 weeks of fighting and over 1,300 dead, Gaza is once again open to journalists and visitors. more »