Police shoot man dead in London after stabbing described as terrorism

World

LONDON (Reuters) – Police shot dead a man who stabbed two people on a busy street in south London on Sunday in what officials described as a terrorist incident believed to be related to Islamist militancy.

Police said in a statement that a hoax device was found strapped to the body of the man killed by armed officers.

One man was being treated for life-threatening injuries after being stabbed, a woman suffered less serious wounds and another woman was hurt by glass after an officer fired his weapon, the statement from London’s Metropolitan Police said.

Some witnesses said the man had been armed with a machete and one said he was wearing silver canisters on his chest.

Footing filmed on the high street in the Streatham district of south London showed two men in plain clothes – one in a hoodie and one with a police baseball cap – pointing their guns at a body on the pavement nearby.

“The incident was quickly declared as a terrorist incident and we believe it to be Islamist-related,” said Lucy D’Orsi, deputy assistance commissioner in the Metropolitan Police.

Police said the situation had been contained.

Chris Wells was in a shop in Streatham with his daughter when they heard three gunshots outside.

“People just came running in screaming and upset, shouting about a gun. We ran to the back of the shop and were locked in,” he told Reuters.

“We tried to leave to get away and I saw a man in a hoodie with a gun, which I now know was a plain clothes officer,” he said. “And another officer shouted at us to get back inside because there was a bomb threat.”

‘THREE GUNSHOTS’

One security source said the attack was being treated as terrorism as the man was thought to have been wearing a fake explosive device.

A Police officer is seen near a site where a man was shot by armed officers in Streatham, south London, Britain, February 2, 2020. REUTERS/Simon Dawson

A Sky News correspondent said he understood that the man was “under active police surveillance”.

“My thoughts are with the injured victims and their loved ones following today’s horrific attack in Streatham,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in a statement. “An investigation is taking place at pace to establish the full facts of what happened.”

Sky quoted Gulled Bulhan, a 19-year-old student from Streatham, as saying he witnessed the shooting.

“I was crossing the road when I saw a man with a machete and silver canisters on his chest being chased by what I assume was an undercover police officer – as they were in civilian clothing,” Bulhan said.

“The man was then shot. I think I heard three gunshots but I can’t quite remember.”

The last such incident in London was in November, when police shot dead a man wearing a fake suicide vest who stabbed two people to death and wounded three more before being wrestled to the ground by bystanders.

That attack, at London Bridge, was carried out by a man with Islamist militant sympathies. He had been jailed for terrorism and released early.

Slideshow (7 Images)

Johnson said his government would announce plans on Monday for making changes to the system for handling people convicted of terrorism offences.

London’s mayor Sadiq Khan said in a statement after Sunday’s incident: “Terrorists seek to divide us and to destroy our way of life – here in London we will never let them succeed.”

Reporting by Elizabeth Piper; Additional reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Michael Holden; Writing by Peter Graff and Frances Kerry; Editing by David Goodman, Angus MacSwan and David Clarke

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

NASA Showcases AI-Powered Computational Tools to Advance Scientific Research at SC24 Event
Disney’s Live-Action Moana Remake Is Now Filming, And I’m Hyped Over A BTS Prop Reveal
‘Maybe Happy Ending’, ‘Death Becomes Her’ See Promising Broadway Numbers
Wendy Stuart Presents TriVersity Talk! Wednesday, November 20th, 2024 7 PM ET With Featured Guest Nicholas James Reilly
Heart-Shaped Clams Channel Sunlight Using Fiber Optic-Like Structures, Says Study