UK Parliament Attack: 5 Dead, Nearly 40 Injured in 'Strike At The Heart' Of London
LONDON: An assailant fatally stabbed a police
officer at the gates to Britain's Parliament compound Wednesday after plowing a
vehicle through terrified pedestrians along a landmark bridge. The attacker was
shot and killed by police, but not before claiming a total of four lives in
what appeared to be Europe's latest high-profile terrorist attack.
In a late night statement, the London Metropolitan police said that they
believed they knew who the attacker was, but did not provide a name. They also
said that their "working assumption" is that he was "inspired by
international terrorism." Police said the man traced a deadly path across
the Westminster Bridge, running down people with an SUV, then ramming the
vehicle into the fence encircling Parliament. At least 40 people were reported
injured.
Finally, the attacker charged with a knife at officers
stationed at the iron gates leading to the Parliament grounds, authorities
said. The police named the fallen officer as Keith Palmer and said that he was
unarmed.
The dead and injured were left scattered on some of London's most famous
streets.
Crumpled bodies lay on the Westminster Bridge over the River Thames, including
at least two people killed. Outside Parliament, a Foreign Office minister -
covered in the blood of the stabbed police officer - tried in vain to save his
life.
"The location of this attack was no accident," said British Prime
Minister Theresa May on Wednesday evening, after chairing COBRA, the
government's emergency committee. "The terrorist chose to strike at the
heart of our capital city, where people of all nationalities, religions and
cultures come together to celebrate the values of liberty, democracy and
freedom of speech."
But she said that "any attempt to defeat those values through violence and
terror is doomed to failure. Tomorrow morning, Parliament will meet as
normal," she said.
A scene of crime officer works near Westminster Bridge and the Houses of
Parliament.
The scene at Parliament earlier in the day was one of
confusion while the Parliament chambers and offices were put on full lockdown
for more than two hours.
"This is a day that we planned for but hoped would never happen. Sadly, it
has now become a reality," said the assistant Metropolitan Police
commissioner, Mark Rowley, outside Scotland Yard's headquarters.
As he spoke, the bells of Big Ben tolled six times to mark the hour.
Even before full details emerged, the apparent attacks and chaos were certain
to raise security levels in London and other Western capitals and bring further
scrutiny on counterterrorism measures.
"We are treating this as a terrorist incident until we know
otherwise," said a Twitter message from London Metropolitan Police.
The attack occurred on Parliament's busiest day of the week, when the prime
minister appears for her weekly questions session and the House of Commons is
packed with visitors.
The Palace of Westminster, the ancient seat of the British Parliament, is
surrounded by heavy security, with high walls, armed officers and metal detectors.
But just outside the compound are busy roads packed with cars and pedestrians.
The attack - a low-tech, high-profile assault on the most potent symbol of
British democracy - fits the profile of earlier strikes in major European
capitals that have raised threat levels across the continent in recent years.
It was apparently carried out by a lone assailant who used easily available
weapons to attack and kill victims in a busy, public setting.
British security officials have taken pride in their record of disrupting such
attacks even as assailants in continental Europe have slipped through. But they
have also acknowledged that their track record would not stay pristine, and
that an attack was inevitable.
When it happened, it was shocking nonetheless. Cellphones captured scenes of
carnage amid some of London's most renowned landmarks.
The target - Westminster - was heavily guarded. But the weapons of choice - an
SUV and a knife - made the attack one of the most difficult kinds to prevent,
requiring the assailant neither to acquire illegal weapons nor to plot with
other conspirators.
Rowley said investigators believe that just one assailant carried out the
attack, but he encouraged the public to remain vigilant.
Britain has been on high alert for terrorist attacks for several years. But
until Wednesday, the country had been spared the sort of mass-casualty attacks
that have afflicted France, Belgium and Germany since 2015.
Ambulances stand with other emergency service vehicles on Westminster
Bridge, London
Among those providing emergency aid was Tobias Ellwood, a
senior official at the Foreign Office and a British military veteran. Photos
showed Ellwood's face streaked with blood after attempting to revive a police
officer who had been stabbed just inside the gates of the parliamentary
compound.
French Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said that among those wounded in the
vehicle attack were members of a group of French students. News media in France
reported that three of the students, on a school trip from a high school in
Brittany, were in serious condition and that their parents were being flown to
London immediately.
In Washington, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said President Trump has
been briefed on the London attack and spoke by phone with Prime Minister May.
"We condemn today's attack in Westminster," Spicer told reporters. He
pledged "the full support of the U.S. government in responding to the
attack and bringing to justice those who are responsible."
Raffaello Pantucci, director of international security studies at the Royal
United Services Institute think tank, said the rapid response suggested that
police "were expecting that an attack was highly likely for some
time."
Images from the bridge showed a man dressed in a suit lying on his back, his
legs splayed to either side, as pedestrians huddled around him administering
first aid. The shoe was off his right foot, and blood stained the sidewalk
beneath his left.
In another image, a woman with long blond hair and running shoes lay in a pool
of blood on the bridge's sidewalk. Blood stained the corner of her mouth as
another pedestrian cradled her head.
Other photos showed people sitting on the sidewalk looking dazed amid broken
glass and bits of automotive debris, with Big Ben looming beyond.
A spokesman for the Port of London Authority said a woman was pulled alive from
the River Thames, and he confirmed reports that she had serious injuries.
As police investigated, much of the activity in the area around Westminster
came to a standstill.
A nearby hospital was put on lockdown and the London Eye - the enormous Ferris
wheel above the River Thames - was stopped and visitors were slowly let off
hours later. Those who were locked inside the Eye's capsules at the time of the
attack were kept there, hovering above as emergency responders swarmed the
scene below.
A witness, Kirsten Hurrell, 70, said she first heard the crash of a car hitting
the fence outside parliament before hearing noises that could have been
gunshots.
"There was a lot of steam from the car," Hurrell told the Guardian
newspaper. "I thought it might explode."
People look out from pods on the London Eye ferris wheel to
the Houses of Parliament after the attack
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said it was in
"close contact with our British counterparts to monitor the tragic events
and to support the ongoing investigation." It noted that U.S. security
threat levels remained unchanged.
A year ago to the day, attackers carried out three coordinated suicide bombings
in Belgium, killing 32 civilians and injuring more than 300 others in two
blasts at Brussels Airport and one at a metro station in the Belgian capital.
The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attacks, in which three
perpetrators were also killed.
As the aftermath of the attack unfolded in London, the Welsh Assembly and the
Scottish Parliament both suspended their sessions. Scottish lawmakers had been
due to debate legislation authorizing a new referendum on independence.
Specialists said the London attack Wednesday appeared to be in line with an
emerging model of strikes involving simple, everyday instruments but carried
out in locations sure to draw global attention.
"Terrorists rely on a lot of people watching - it can be even better than
having a lot of people dead," said Frank Foley, a scholar of terrorism and
counterterrorism at the Department of War Studies at King's College London.
Within a few hours of the attack, there were signs that normalcy was returning
to London.
At the London Eye near the Westminster Bridge, a large crowd of tourists
gathered by the ferris wheel.
Charles Thompson, a 21-year-old chef from Canada, wondered if there would be
more attacks. "Usually its a chain-reaction thing," he said.
His friend, Enrique Cooper, a 32-year-old officer manager originally from
Italy, said he would not let the day's violence change his view of London.
"I'm here all the time," he said. "You can't let something like
this ruin your perspective."
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