Finsbury Park attack: Man dies as van hits worshippers are external links and will open in a new window
A man has died and 10 people have
been injured after a man drove a van into worshippers near a north London
mosque. The van struck people after mounting
the pavement just after midnight BST outside Muslim Welfare House, near
Finsbury Park Mosque. A 48-year-old man has been arrested. Home Secretary Amber
Rudd said police were treating it as a "terrorist incident".
Eyewitness Abdul Rahman said the
driver said he wanted to "kill all Muslims". Mr Rahman told the BBC
he struck the man and helped subdue him. "When the guy came out from his
van he wanted to escape, run away and he was saying 'I want to kill Muslims. 'I
want to kill Muslims.' "I hit him on his stomach... and then me and the
other guys... we held him to the ground until he couldn't move. We stopped him
until the police came." Counter-terrorism officers are at the scene, the
Metropolitan Police said.
And extra police are being deployed
to reassure communities, especially those observing Ramadan, Mayor of London
Sadiq Khan said. He also said his "thoughts and prayers" were
with those affected by the "horrific terrorist attack on innocent
people". "While this appears to be an attack on a particular
community, like the terrible attacks in Manchester, Westminster and London
Bridge it is also an assault on all our shared values of tolerance, freedom and
respect."
Harun Khan, secretary general of the
Muslim Council of Britain said: "Over the past weeks and months, Muslims
have endured many incidents of Islamophobia, and this is the most violent
manifestation to date. "We expect the authorities to increase security outside
mosques as a matter of urgency." Many of the victims are believed to have
just left evening prayers at the Muslim Welfare House after breaking the
Ramadan fast.
It has appealed for calm, adding that
"all of our efforts should be towards getting justice for the victims and
ensuring our community stays the diverse, tolerant and welcome place we know it
to be". The prime minister will chair a meeting of the emergency Cobra
committee later. Mrs May described it as a "terrible incident",
adding: "All my thoughts are with those who have been injured, their loved
ones and the emergency services on the scene."
If confirmed as a terror attack it
would be the fourth such incident in the UK in four months, after attacks in
Westminster, Manchester and on London Bridge. The van driver was arrested after
being detained by members of the public at the scene following the collision at
00:20 BST. Police said there were no reports of anyone suffering from knife
injuries after speculation at the scene the driver was armed with a knife.
Abdulrahman Saleh Alamoudi said he
was among a group of people helping an elderly worshipper who had fallen down
when the van swerved towards them. Video posted online of the aftermath showed
a scene of chaos as people tried to help the injured. One man could be seen
giving CPR to a victim in the street while another man's head injury was
treated with a makeshift dressing. An eyewitness told how he jumped out the way
of the van as it struck. He said: "He just came into all of us. There was
a lot of people. We got told to move straight away. "I was shocked,
shocked, shocked. There were bodies around me. "Thank God I just moved to
the side. I just jumped. Everyone is hurt. Everyone is actually hurt."
Another who lives in a flat on Seven
Sisters Road told the BBC she saw people "shouting and screaming". "Everyone
was shouting 'a van's hit people'. "There was this white van stopped
outside Finsbury Park Mosque that seems to have hit people who were coming out
of the mosque after prayers finished." She said the road was "backed
up" with police cars, ambulance and fire engines.
Corbyn
'shocked'
Some witnesses at the scene - near
Finsbury Park Station and Arsenal's Emirates stadium - said more than one
attacker may have been involved. But the Met said: "At this early stage of
this investigation, no other suspects at the scene have been identified or reported
to police, however the investigation continues."
Mrs Rudd described it as an appalling
incident, and said new funding for security at religious sites had recently
been arranged. "We have a places of worship fund which we announced last
summer, which is there to protect places of worship like mosques. We will make
sure that we do all we can to reduce these sort of attacks." Environment
Secretary Michael Gove said the attack was a "disgusting and immoral
act".
"Words fail me that someone
could find it in their heart to behave in this way."
Labour
leader and Islington North MP Jeremy Corbyn said on Twitter: "I'm totally shocked at the incident
at Finsbury Park tonight. "I've been in touch with the mosques, police and
Islington council regarding the incident. My thoughts are with those and the
community affected by this awful event." Mr Corbyn also said he would be
attending prayers at Finsbury Park Mosque later on Monday with Islington
Council Leader Richard Watts.
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