Ariana Grande to hold concert in Manchester for bombing victims
A tweet from US pop star Ariana Grande is shown as she makes an announcement on the Manchester bombing on her Twitter account. |
LOS ANGELES - US pop star Ariana Grande said on Friday that she will hold a benefit concert in Manchester for the victims of Monday's suicide bombing at her show in the English city.
Grande, 23, said in a message on her Instagram account that a date for the concert had not yet been worked out.
Monday's suicide bombing, which killed 22 people and injured more than 100, many of them young people, took place just after Grande had finished performing. She later canceled several concerts scheduled in London and Europe through June 5.
"I'll be returning to the incredibly brave city of Manchester to spend time with my fans and to have a benefit concert in honor of and to raise money for the victims and their families. ... I will have details to share with you as soon as everything is confirmed," Grande wrote.
She also tweeted a link to a fundraising site for the victims organized by the Manchester Evening News, which has so far brought in some 1.7 million pounds ($2.1 million)
Grande tweeted after the bombing she was "broken" by the attack by British-born Salman Abedi that was claimed by Islamic State. She returned to her Florida home on Tuesday.
A woman walks past a billboard advertising US singer Ariana Grande's world tour in Buenos Aires, Argentina May 24, 2017. [Photo/Agencies] |
In her Instagram posting, she said that her "Dangerous Woman" concert tour was intended to be a "space for my fans, a place for them to escape, to celebrate, to heal, to feel safe and to be themselves."
She said the victims would be "on my mind and in my heart everyday ... for the rest of my life."
But she added defiantly: "We will not quit or operate in fear. We won't let this divide us. We won't let hate win."
Former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher, a Manchester native, said on Friday he would donate the proceeds of his show next Tuesday in the city to a fund supporting victims and their families.
Gallagher tweeted that he was "in total shock and absolutely devastated" by the attack.
- Queen Elizabeth II visits young victims of Manchester bombing
- UK police seek network of bombers in wake of Manchester blast
- 7th person linked to Manchester attack detained by police
- Manchester comes amid 300 terror deaths in EU
- Victims of Manchester bomb attack named
- Three more arrested in Manchester; attacker's Libya ties probed
- Manchester suicide bomber named by police
- Xi: Deep sadness for Manchester
- Xi leads condolences as Manchester terror attack kills 22, injures 59
- Eyewitnesses describe Manchester blast horror and chaos
- Manchester medics say 12 children under 16 injured in suicide bombing
- Police say shopping centre arrest not connected to Manchester attack
- Ariana Grande says she is broken by the Manchester bombing
- Manchester Bombing: What we know so far