Boston
lockdown: Huge manhunt as Swat teams join 9,000 police in search for
suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev after shootout leaves his brother Tamerlan
and MIT police officer dead
Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev, 19, escaped after the other suspect, his 26-year-old
brother Tamerlan, was killed in the early hours of this morning
following a high-speed car chase along the Charles River that ended
in the suburban community of Watertown. Earlier, the two suspects,
immigrants of Chechen origin who lived next door in Cambridge,
fatally shot campus police officer Sean Collier, who was responding
to a report of a robbery at a convenience store on the grounds of the
Massachusetts of Institute of Technology.
Thousands
of officers involved in extraordinary citywide hunt for brothers who
led police in high-speed chase into suburbs
19 April, 2013
The sprawling Boston metropolitan area is in lockdown today as thousands of officers from state and federal law enforcement agencies mount a massive manhunt for one of the two suspects in the marathon bombings that killed three people and injured more than 170 on Monday.
Watertown,
just across the river from Boston, is at the centre of the search
involving some 9,000 officers from local and state police, the FBI,
the US Department of Homeland Security and other law enforcement
agencies. Authorities have cordoned off an area spanning some 20
blocks as they hunt for the suspect, whom officers fear may have
explosives. His brother was found with an explosive device strapped
to his body.
In
the wider area, the manhunt has paralyzed Boston and the surrounding
towns. Public transportation is suspended, and numerous schools,
universities and businesses are closed as national attention turns to
the chase. At the suspects’ family home in Cambridge’s Norfolk
Street, bomb disposal experts are due to carry out a controlled
explosion in the afternoon after sweeping the scene through the
morning.
Tensions
in Watertown, meanwhile, are running high as officials go house by
house in their search for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Residents were woken by
phones calls from the emergency services advising them not to answer
the door unless they were visited by police officers bearing proper
identification.
Heavily
armed officers could be seen making their way in and out of the
exclusion zone, while military helicopters hovered over the
buildings.
On
Thursday night, hours after the FBI released images and a video of
the two suspects, the duo attempted to rob a convenience store and
shot a campus officer, Sean Collier, before stealing a car. Along
with the car, they also took a hostage, who was released unharmed
after around 30 minutes. The shootout that led to the death of one of
the suspects also resulted in the injury of a transit officer, who
was in surgery today. No motive has yet been identified for the
brothers’ actions.
The
brothers’ uncle has implored Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to turn himself in
and “ask for forgiveness from the victims, from the injured”.
Speaking
outside his home in Maryland, Ruslan Tsarni said: “Somebody
radicalised them, but it was not my brother.”
He
said his family had been estranged from the suspects for many years.
When asked by reporters why he thought the brothers had acted they
way they did, he said: “Being losers, not being able to settle
themselves, and thereby just hating everyone who did.” Of Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev, he added: “He put a shame on our family. He put a shame
on the entire Chechen ethnicity.”
As
the hunt continued, the Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick said
people around the Boston metropolitan area, which has a population of
more than 4 million, should “remain indoors”. “Keep the doors
locked,” he added.

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