The Phnom Penh Post

Focus turns to PM May after horror at London Bridge

-

released about the perpetrato­rs, who were shot dead within eight minutes of the first call to the police.

“A number of people have been detained,” police said in a statement after two morning raids in London. Another 11 people are also being held in custody.

The row over policing erupted as campaignin­g for the election resumed after being suspended for a day out of respect for the victims.

“We should never have cut the police numbers,” Corbyn said.

May insisted London police were happy with their resources, while counterter­rorism budgets had been protected and the number of armed officers increased.

The capital’s Police Chief Cressida Dick and Mayor Sadiq Khan visited London Bridge yesterday, as commuters returned to the scene of the attacks after some security cordons were removed.

“A very high priority for us is to try to understand whether they were working with anybody else,” Dick told BBC TV.

She said police had seized “a huge amount of forensic material” after examining the white van used in the attack.

“We will change and adapt to what appears to be a new reality for us,” she said.

‘Perverse ideology’

Khan, a practising Muslim, said the attackers’ ideology was “perverse, it is poisonous and it has no place in Islam”.

May blamed “evil” Islamist ideology and vowed to crack down on extremist content online, warning that attackers were “copying one another”.

She said the same ideology was behind the May 22 Manchester suicide bombing at a pop concert that left 22 people dead, and the Westminste­r Bridge attack in March, which killed five.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for Saturday’s carnage.

“A detachment of fighters from Islamic State carried out London attacks,” said the Amaq news agency, which is affiliated with the jihadists.

The victims included 48 people treated in hospital for injuries. Of those, 21 are still in a critical condition.

A Canadian and a Frenchman were among the fatalities and citizens of several nations were among the injured, including Australia, Bulgaria, France and New Zealand.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian was due to visit Britain on Monday to speak to the injured French nationals.

The assailants ran people over on London Bridge before lunging seemingly at random at crowds gathered around Borough Market, which is full of restaurant­s and bars.

Eight officers fired an “unpreceden­ted” 50 rounds at the three attackers, according to Mark Rowley, head of national counterter­rorism policing, who said a bystander had also suffered a gunshot wound.

Gerard Vowls, 47, said he saw a woman repeatedly stabbed, and threw chairs, glasses and bottles at the attackers in a bid to stop them.

A vigil for the victims was set to take place at nearby Tower Bridge yesterday evening.

 ?? ODD ANDERSEN/AFP ?? Constructi­on workers lay flowers at a pedestrian crossing on the south side of London Bridge, close to Borough Market, in London yesterday.
ODD ANDERSEN/AFP Constructi­on workers lay flowers at a pedestrian crossing on the south side of London Bridge, close to Borough Market, in London yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia