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Manchester Arena explosion: Fifth suspect 'carrying suspicious package' arrested in Wigan

Five people have been arrested over the Manchester Arena bombing: PA
Five people have been arrested over the Manchester Arena bombing: PA

Police have arrested a fifth suspect over the Manchester Arena suicide bombing after officers dramatically swooped to seize a man carrying a suspicious package.

Pictures posted online showed a man being wrestled to the floor by armed officers as he was detained in Wigan on Wednesday afternoon.

His arrest comes hours after the brother of bomber Salman Abedi was held in Tripoli in connection to the blast, which claimed the lives of 22 people at Ariana Grande's concert on Monday night.

Four other people have been detained in the UK over the atrocity.

Wigan town centre was in lockdown on Wednesday afternoon as officers carrying automatic weapons carried out the latest raid.

Witnesses said a man was tackled to the ground in Upper Dicconson Street after he was seen with a suspicious package.

Photos shared on social media appear to show him being led away by plain clothes officers with their faces covered wearing black police caps.

Wigan Council warned people to avoid the area because of an "ongoing police incident".

A nearby nursery, Little Acorns, was put into lockdown and warned parents not to come to collect their children.

"We are currently on lock down due to an incident in the area," a statement on its Facebook page said.

"We are safe. All children are upstairs. Please DO NOT come for your children at little Acorns you will not get in."

Greater Manchester Police said: "We have made an arrest in Wigan this afternoon in connection with the investigation into the horrific incident at Manchester Arena.

"The man was carrying a package which we are currently assessing, a police cordon remains in place while this is carried out."

An officer in a white forensic suit is examining a red bag which the suspect was carrying, according to one witness, who did not want to be named.

"There was a lot of officers coming in with a few cars from different directions," the restaurant owner said.

"They wrestled with a man on the floor and he had a red bag.

"Now there's a man in a white suit looking in the bag - he's taking something out of it.

"They've sealed the whole area off, put tape around the perimeter.

"My restaurant is in the middle of it and I can't open my front door.

"There were a lot of armed officers with their faces covered - with balaclavas and machine guns.

"They told us to get in, lock the windows and close the doors."

He said he has not seen the arrested man before, and added: "We've never had something like this happen here before - hopefully it's a one-off."

Soufiane Hamdadou, the owner of nearby restaurant Fat Olive, said he saw armed police on the street at about 3pm.

He said: "I heard shouting and screaming and looked out of the window and saw a man getting wrestled down to the ground.

"It was undercover police and they were armed with balaclavas on. They circled the man and took him away.

"The man had a red bag and the police sealed off the whole area and moved the bag to the other side of the road.

"A man in a white forensics suit was looking at it and then I think they took the bag away."

Mr Hamdadou said he was told to stay inside and only allowed to come out of the building again after 6.30pm.

Some residents reported seeing a bomb disposal unit on the scene.

Joanne McKnight, 46, said she returned to her home on Dicconson Street, off Upper Dicconson Street, just before 4pm and found it cordoned off.

She said: "The police escorted us back to the house and told us to stay inside until things started clearing."

The police cordon was removed at about 7pm.

Police confirmed on Tuesday that suicide bomber Salman Abedi, 22, detonated a device among a crowd of people as they left the 21,000-capacity venue on Monday.

Among those killed was eight-year-old Saffie-Rose Roussos, the youngest victim to be named so far.

Others included teenagers Olivia Campbell, Sorrell Leczkowski, Georgina Callander and Nell Jones.

Parents waiting to collect children from the gig also died in the blast.

The bomber's brother Hashem Abedi has been held by police in the Libyan capital on suspicion of links with the Islamic State, Reuters reported today.

Armed police also swooped on a block of flats in central Manchester on Wednesday afternoon in the latest of a series of raids in the city.

Residents reported hearing "an explosion" after officers stormed the building.