Cape Times

Two die in Barcelona attack

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BARCELONA: A van crashed into dozens of people in the centre of Barcelona yesterday and Spanish media say at least 13 people were killed.

Police said several people had been injured and described the incident on Twitter as a “massive crash”. A police spokespers­on said he could not confirm any deaths or that the incident was being treated as terrorism.

Soon afterwards, Spain’s El Periodico newspaper reported that two armed men were holed up in a bar in Barcelona’s city centre and reported gunfire in the area, although it did not cite the source of the informatio­n. It was not clear whether the incidents were connected.

Following the van crash, emergency services said people should not go to the area around Barcelona’s Placa Catalunya, one of the city’s main squares at the top of the famous Las Ramblas avenue, and requested the closure of nearby train and metro stations.

El Pais newspaper said the driver of the vehicle had fled on foot after mowing down dozens of people.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said the priority was to attend to the injured.

The incident took place at the height of the tourist season in Barcelona, which is one of Europe’s top travel destinatio­ns with at least 11 million visitors a year. While full details of the van incident were not immediatel­y clear, vehicles have been used to ram into crowds in a series of militant attacks across Europe since July last year, killing well over 100 people in Nice, Berlin, London and Stockholm.

Witness Ethan Spibey told Britain’s Sky News: “All of sudden it was real chaos. People just started running, screaming, there were loud bangs. People just started running into shops, there was a kind of mini-stampede where we were, down one of the alleyways.”

He said he had taken refuge with dozens of others in a church. “They’ve locked the doors because I’m not sure whether the person who may have done it has actually been caught, so they’ve told people just to wait in here.”

In recent weeks, threatenin­g graffiti against tourists has appeared in Barcelona. In one video released under the slogan “tourism kills neighbourh­oods”, several hooded individual­s stopped a tourist bus in Barcelona, slashed the tyres and spray-painted the windscreen.

The deadliest recent attack in Spain was in March 2004, when Islamist militants placed bombs on commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people and wounding more than 1 800.

 ?? Picture: AP ?? FIRST AID: Injured people are treated in Barcelona, Spain, yesterday after a white van jumped the sidewalk in the historic Las Ramblas district, crashing into a crowd of residents and tourists and injuring dozens of people, police said.
Picture: AP FIRST AID: Injured people are treated in Barcelona, Spain, yesterday after a white van jumped the sidewalk in the historic Las Ramblas district, crashing into a crowd of residents and tourists and injuring dozens of people, police said.

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