An “armed and dangerous” Afghan-born suspect wanted in the weekend bomb attacks in New York and New Jersey was wounded yesterday in a shootout with police and taken into custody.
The Saturday attacks and a separate stabbing carried out by a Somali-American with possible links to the Islamic State extremist group has put America on edge over terror fears less than 50 days before the presidential election.
President Barack Obama, in New York yesterday attending the UN General Assembly with world leaders, called on Americans “not to succumb to fear” in his first remarks about the three attacks in the same 24-hour period.
“Even as we have to be vigilant and aggressive both in preventing senseless acts of violence but also making sure that we find those who carry out such acts and bring them to justice, we all have a role to play as citizens in making sure that we don’t succumb to that fear,” he said.
Obama stressed that investigators at this point saw “no connection” between the incidents on the East Coast and the Minnesota stabbing, where police said the attacker made “some references to god” in carrying out the attack.
Ahmad Khan Rahami, 28, was shown stretchered into an ambulance, sporting a bloodied bandage on his right arm and moving his head with his eyes open in the New Jersey town of Linden, according to ABC News footage.
Two police officers were also shot and hurt in the exchange, said the mayor of the suspect’s neighbouring hometown Elizabeth, adjacent to Newark International Airport.
“Mr Rahami is currently under arrest,” mayor Chris Bollwage told CNN. “One police officer in the city of Linden was shot in the chest and one was shot in the hand.
Mr Rahami also sustained shots,” Bollwage added.
His arrest came around four hours after the FBI released a mugshot of the brown-haired and bearded Rahami, calling him “armed and dangerous”, in text message alerts sent to millions of people in the New York area.
FBI officers late Sunday also found and defused a nest of bombs planted at the train station in Elizabeth.
Police want to question Rahami in connection with Saturday night’s bombing in New York’s Chelsea neighbourhood that injured 29 people and Saturday morning’s Seaside Park pipe bombing, which forced the cancellation of a US Marine race.
The discovery of the nest of bombs in Elizabeth may also be linked to the two attacks in New Jersey and in Manhattan, where a pressure cooker bomb was also successfully defused.
“From the bombs that were undetonated you can often get good evidence.
You can get finger prints, DNA etc,” New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said on CBS.
“And the investigation is now targeting certain individuals who might suggest that this did have a foreign connection,” he added.
Little is known about Rahami, other than that his family ran a chicken restaurant and sued Elizabeth in 2011, accusing the city of discrimination stemming from complaints about keeping their business open beyond a curfew.
Fifteen years after the September 11, 2001 attacks, officials stress that lone-wolf attacks perpetrated by individuals who may be inspired by IS or Al Qaeda propaganda are the greatest terror threat to the homeland.
What was still unclear yesterday was whether an individual or a wider group was responsible for the bomb attacks and the explosives planted in Elizabeth.
Seaside Park is around 100km from Elizabeth, and 150km from Manhattan.
“We know a lot more than we did just 24 hours ago.
It’s certainly leaning more in the direction that this was a specific act of terror,” New York Mayor de Blasio told ABC.
New York police have beefed up massively in the city, fanning out reinforcements to bus terminals, subway stations and airports.
Although there has been no claim of responsibility for the Chelsea bombing or any of the bombs in New Jersey, a jihadist-linked news agency, Amaq, claimed that an IS “soldier” carried out the Minnesota stabbings.
A 22-year-old Somali-American injured nine people in a shopping mall in St Cloud on Saturday before being shot dead by an off-duty police officer.
Clinton, said yesterday that the US needed to invest “more resources” in confronting the lone-wolf threat.
“The recruitment and radicalisation that goes on online has to be much more vigorously intercepted and prevented,” she said in White Plains, New York.
President Obama said authorities are investigating the stabbing as a potential act of terrorism.
The man in the Minnesota incident was described a “soldier of the Islamic State”, the militant group’s news agency said on Sunday.
President Obama praised police and first responders in New York City and New Jersey for their “quick response, which surely prevented even more people from being hurt,” in the wake of bombings in both locations over the weekend.
He also praised “the quick action of a brave off-duty police officer” who killed a suspect in a terror-related stabbing attack in Minnesota on the weekend.
 As millions of Americans around New York and New Jersey began their commutes yesterday, their cellphones abruptly alerted them to a manhunt for a suspect in weekend bombings in the area.
“WANTED: Ahmad Khan Rahami, 28-yr-old male. See media for pic. Call 9-1-1 if seen.”
It was the first time the national Wireless Emergency Alert system was used in the search for a criminal or terror suspect, according to media reports.
The system, managed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is usually used to warn about dangerous weather or missing children.
Yesterday’s use amounted effectively to an “electronic wanted poster,” as the New York Times put it.
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