The COVID-19 lockdowns may have resulted in more people being self-radicalised on the Internet, a British minister has warned following a terrorist bomb attack in Liverpool on Remembrance Sunday. A taxi exploded outside Liverpool Women’s Hospital at 10:59 a.m. on Sunday, killing the passenger and injuring the driver, around a mile away from the city’s cathedral where a large Remembrance service was taking place. Police declared it a terrorist attack and later named the suspect as 32-year-old Emad Al Swealmeen, who was killed in the blast. Talking to Sky News on Tuesday, Security Minister Damian Hinds said there has been an increase of “self-directed” terror plots carried to self-radicalised individuals. “It certainly is true that we’ve seen a move over time, a shift from these what we call directed attacks, part of a bigger organisation where people are following instructions, sometimes quite complex in their organisation, and move from that …