The Gold Coast Bulletin

THE TERROR OF LONDON

CITY KNIFED IN HEART

- ELLEN WHINNETT

HEAVILY armed police last night were carrying out raids at multiple properties in England’s West Midlands, seeking informatio­n about the attacker who killed a police officer and two innocent pedestrian­s in a terrorist attack that struck the heart of London.

Officers arrested seven people in the London and Birmingham operations, raiding six properties after the bloody rampage by an Islamic extremist outside the famous Parliament at Westminste­r.

An Australian woman is among more than 40 people injured in the terror attack, in which four people died, including the attacker.

Those killed included Police Constable Keith Palmer, 48, who was stabbed outside Parliament, a woman in her mid-40s and a man in his mid-50s. Another 29 people were treated in hospital, with seven in a critical condition.

Patricia Neis-Beer, a German-born Australian resident from South Australia, was among those injured when the terrorist used a speeding car to mow down tourists on Westminste­r Bridge before fatally stabbing unarmed PC Palmer at the entrance to Westminste­r.

The terrorist was gunned down by police near the landmark Big Ben clock tower and died a short time later.

Ms Neis-Beer, who has a 26-year-old son, Jordan, and a 19-year-old daughter, Paige, works in an organic market and cafe in Stirling in the Adelaide Hills.

Her condition was not known last night.

It was the first mass-casualty terrorism attack on British soil in more than a decade.

Police have confirmed the death of PC Palmer, 48, who was stabbed multiple times outside Westminste­r. The British media have also named mother-of-two Aysha Frade, 43, as a victim, saying she died on Westminste­r Bridge as she went to collect her children from school.

The attacks on the doorstep of democracy at Westminste­r shocked London, where authoritie­s have been warning for months the threat posed by Islamic terrorism was “severe’’.

Police raided properties in the regional city of Birmingham, in the West Midlands, seeking informatio­n about the attacker and the car, apparently a rented Hyundai 4WD, which was used to murder pedestrian­s going about their business in central London.

West Midlands police would only confirm an operation was under way, but a witness told the media the attacker lived in a secondfloo­r flat above a shop in Hagley Rd in the Bearwood area.

“The man from London lived here,” the witness told media, adding officers had arrested three men at that scene.

The attacker, whose identity is known to police but being withheld, struck at 2.40pm on Wednesday, London time, when Parliament was sitting and the Westminste­r district was teeming with tourists.

The man, aged in his 40s, drove the car at high speed from the tourist precinct of Southbank north across the River Thames.

He crushed people along the footpath on the left side of the bridge, then rammed through a fence near Big Ben before stabbing Constable Palmer multiple times with two large knives.

He was then shot as he ran towards the Westminste­r entrance.

The injured include French schoolchil­dren and British university students. South Korean tourists are also among the dozens injured, which included three police officers.

An emotional Prime Minister Theresa May spoke outside her official residence at 10 Downing St, saying the lo-

cation of the attack was “no accident’’ and the terrorist had committed “a sick and depraved’’ act.

“The terrorists chose to strike at the heart of our capital city where all nationalit­ies, religions and cultures come together to celebrate the values of liberty, democracy and freedom of speech,” she said.

Scotland Yard’s counterter­rorism chief, Mark Rowley, said the working assumption was the attack was “Islamistre­lated” and “inspired by internatio­nal terrorism.’’

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 ??  ?? Injured Australian Patricia Neis-Beer (top); and Police Constable Keith Palmer, who died in the attack.
Injured Australian Patricia Neis-Beer (top); and Police Constable Keith Palmer, who died in the attack.
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 ??  ?? Emergency services outside the Palace of Westminste­r; from left, police gather around the car after it crashed near the Houses of Parliament; a man is treated by paramedics; and a police officer is led away by a colleague. Pictures: PA; AP
Emergency services outside the Palace of Westminste­r; from left, police gather around the car after it crashed near the Houses of Parliament; a man is treated by paramedics; and a police officer is led away by a colleague. Pictures: PA; AP
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