The Telegram (St. John's)

Britain says stabbing in town park was terrorism

- PETER NICHOLLS

READING, England — A stabbing rampage in the southern English town of Reading in which three people were killed and others wounded was an act of terrorism, police said Sunday, calling the attack in a sunny park an atrocity.

Detectives said a man had run into a park in Reading, about 40 miles (65 km) west of London where locals had been enjoying the evening sun on Saturday, and attacked people with a knife before being detained by unarmed officers.

Police said an unnamed 25-year-old man had been arrested on suspicion of murder and remained in police custody.

A Western security source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that the arrested man was a Libyan called Khairi Saadallah.

Initially police and the government had said the attack did not appear to be terrorism. But Britain’s most senior counter-terrorism police officer, Neil Basu, said officers had worked through the night and had now declared it to be a terrorist incident.

“This was an atrocity,” Basu said. “From our enquiries undertaken so far, officers have found nothing to suggest that there were any other people involved in the attack, and presently, we are not looking for anyone else in relation to this incident.”

While the motivation for the attack was far from certain, he said there was no intelligen­ce that crowded places were at risk.

The victims have not yet been identified.

The security source said Saadallah had come across the radar of Britain’s domestic security agency MI5 last year over intelligen­ce he had aspiration­s to travel for extremist purposes, although his plans came to nothing.

He never met the criteria for a full investigat­ion, the source said.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson held a meeting Sunday with security officials, senior ministers and police to be updated about the investigat­ion.

He said he was “appalled and sickened” by the attack and said Britain would change the law if needed to prevent any future incidents.

“If there are lessons we need to learn … we will learn those lessons and we will not hesitate to take action if necessary,” he said.

A witness said the attack began in Reading’s Forbury Gardens when a man suddenly shouted intelligib­ly and then veered toward a group of about eight to 10 friends and began stabbing them.

“He darted round anticlockw­ise the circle, got one, went to another, stabbed the next one, went to another, stabbed the next one,” Lawrence Wort, 20, told BBC TV. “He stood up and I saw a massive knife in his hand, probably at least five inches minimum.”

The attack took place after a Black Lives Matter rally by anti-racism protesters in the park which concluded three hours earlier but Basu said the two incidents were not related.

Current coronaviru­s restrictio­ns mean venues like pubs are closed, so many people in Britain gather in parks in the evenings to meet friends.

PAST STABBING ATTACKS

The nature of the attack was reminiscen­t of a number of recent incidents in Britain that authoritie­s considered to be terrorism.

In February, police shot dead a man, previously jailed for promoting violent Islamist material, who had stabbed two people on a busy street in south London. Last November another man who had been jailed for terrorism offences stabbed two people to death on London Bridge before he too was shot dead by police.

Britain also suffered four attacks in 2017, the most deadly of which - a suicide bombing at the end of a concert by U.S. singer Ariana Grande in Manchester, northern England - was carried out by a Briton born to Libyan parents.

In April, the officer in charge of the police’s antiradica­lization programme said social isolation during the coronaviru­s lockdown could make people more susceptibl­e to being exploited by extremists.

“Isolation may exacerbate grievances that make people more vulnerable to radicalisa­tion – such as financial insecurity or social alienation,” Chief Superinten­dent Nik Adams said.

 ?? PETER NICHOLLS • REUTERS ?? Police officers cross the cordon at the scene of multiple stabbings in Reading, Britain, Sunday.
PETER NICHOLLS • REUTERS Police officers cross the cordon at the scene of multiple stabbings in Reading, Britain, Sunday.

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