The Phnom Penh Post

Islamic State claims attack at British parliament

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attack on British soil.

“The perpetrato­r of yesterday’s attack in front of the British parliament was a soldier of the Islamic State and the operation was carried out in response to calls to target coalition countries,” Amaq said citing a “security source”.

Britain is a member of the USled coalition fighting IS in Iraq and Syria that the jihadist group has urged its followers to target.

Barely 24 hours later, Belgian police arrested a man as he tried to drive into a crowd at high speed in a shopping area in the port city of Antwerp.

The London carnage was unleashed the same day Brussels marked the first anniversar­y of bombings that killed 32 people and were also claimed by IS.

Hundreds of extra police were on patrol as officers worked around the clock to piece together what happened in the attack.

Wednesday’s attacker mowed down pedestrian­s with a car along Westminste­r Bridge – a busy traffic route and popular tourist spot with views of parliament and the Big Ben clock tower. He then rammed the railings outside parliament and jumped out of the car, stabbing to death a police officer before being shot dead.

The other victims were a 43-year-old mother and a man in his 50s. Twenty-nine people were treated in hospital, including seven in critical condition, some with “catastroph­ic” injuries. Among them were French school children and foreign tourists.

Europe has been on high alert after a wave of deadly jihadist assaults over the past two years.

May said the attacker’s iden- tity was known to police and the MI5 domestic intelligen­ce service although she did not name him. He was British-born and some years ago had been a “peripheral figure” investigat­ed over concerns about violent extremism.

“There was no prior intelligen­ce of his intent – or of the plot,” May said.

‘Acted alone’

Top anti-terror officer Mark Rowley said police arrested eight people in raids on six houses in London, the central city of Birmingham and elsewhere.

“It is still our belief . . . that this attacker acted alone yesterday and was inspired by internatio­nal terrorism,” he said.

Rowley acknowledg­ed that Muslim communitie­s “will feel anxious at this time” after previous extreme right-wing attacks and said police would work with community leaders to ensure protection.

The British flag over parliament flew at half-mast while forensic officers in white suits carried out a search of the courtyard where 48-year-old policeman Keith Palmer was slain.

Britain’s last terror attack was the 2016 assassinat­ion of MP Jo Cox by a pro-Nazi sympathise­r shortly before the historic but deeply divisive vote to leave the EU. That vote has triggered a push in Scotland for a second independen­ce referendum but the parliament in Edinburgh this week postponed a debate and vote on the issue.

The debate is now due to resume Tuesday, the day before Britain is to trigger the Article 50 two-year EU divorce process.

A Spanish diplomatic source confirmed that one of the dead was 43-year-old British citizen Aysha Frade, whose mother was Spanish. Media reports said she was on her way to pick up her two daughters, aged 7 and 9, from school.

Several foreign tourists visiting one of London’s most iconic sights were also caught up in the violence. Three police officers were among those hurt and a seriously injured woman was rescued from the river after coming off the bridge.

 ?? JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP ?? British police officers bow their heads as they stand directly outside New Scotland Yard in central London yesterday during a minute of silence to commemorat­e the victims of the attack.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP British police officers bow their heads as they stand directly outside New Scotland Yard in central London yesterday during a minute of silence to commemorat­e the victims of the attack.
 ?? JIJI PRESS/AFP ?? Yasunori Kagoike gestures before giving a sworn testimony during a session of parliament in Tokyo yesterday.
JIJI PRESS/AFP Yasunori Kagoike gestures before giving a sworn testimony during a session of parliament in Tokyo yesterday.

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