Khaleej Times

Terror links in Australian car ramming incident ruled out

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sydney — Australian police said there is no evidence of a terrorist link to a car ramming attack on Thursday in central Melbourne that left 19 people injured.

Police said the driver was a 32-year-old Australian citizen of Afghan decent who has a known history of drug use and mental health issues. The man was known to police for historical minor assault and traffic offenses.

“We don’t at this time have any evidence or any intelligen­ce to indicate there’s a connection with terrorism,” said Victoria state police acting commission­er Shane Patton.

The streets outside the city’s iconic Flinders Street railway station were crowded with Christmas shoppers on Thursday afternoon when a white Suzuki SUV ran a red light and sped up to slam into pedestrian­s crossing the road before crashing into a traffic barrier.

While police had earlier said 14 people had been injured, Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews confirmed that 19 people had been taken to hospitals. The four listed in critical condition are believed to include a preschool-aged child, Australian media reported.

Andrews described the incident as “an act of evil and an act of cowardice, perpetrate­d against innocent bystanders”.

Witnesses described a horrific scene. “I was crossing Flinders Street on the way to the train station. I heard an engine rev behind me and heard a thump,” one man identified only as David said on ABC TV. He said he turned around saw “people literally getting thrown into the air as it hit them.”

Bystanders rushed to drag the driver out of the vehicle before police arrived to arrest the man.

Early reports said there were two men in the car, but Patton confirmed the suspect was driving alone.

Confusion had arisen when a second man was seen being apprehende­d alongside the driver. Patton said this was a 24-year-old man who was seen filming the incident on his mobile phone and found carrying a bag containing three knives.

Patton said that man was taken into custody to determine whether he was connected. “At this stage we don’t believe that to be the case,” he said.

Patton said the investigat­ion would involve the force’s counterter­rorism unit to ensure “that there isn’t that connection, and that there is no ongoing threat,” but that this was being treated as a singular incident. He said police were working with Australian intelligen­ce agency ASIO, and with Australian Federal Police, and that there was no intelligen­ce to suggest the man was a person of interest to those bodies.

“We understand he’s on a mental health plan and receiving treatment for a mental illness,” Patton said. — AP

 ?? AFP ?? Police and emergency personnel work at the scene of where a car ran over pedestrian­s in Flinders Street in Melbourne on Thursday. —
AFP Police and emergency personnel work at the scene of where a car ran over pedestrian­s in Flinders Street in Melbourne on Thursday. —

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