Updated On: 24 May, 2017 10:30 AM IST | Manchester | IANS
<p>The British man believed to have killed 22 people in a suicide-bomb attack here, had ties to Al Qaeda and had received terror training abroad, a US intelligence official said</p>


People hold a "peace" flag during a vigil in Albert Square in Manchester, northwest England, in solidarity with those killed an injured in the May 22 terror attack at the Ariana Grande concert at the Manchester Arena. AFP PHOTO
The British man believed to have killed 22 people in a suicide-bomb attack, had ties to Al Qaeda and had received terror training abroad, a US intelligence official said.