Khaleej Times

UK to up MPS’ security after lawmaker stabbed to death

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Britain’s interior minister on Sunday said MPS’ security would be beefed up, after a lawmaker was stabbed to death as he held a public meeting with constituen­ts, in the second such attack in five years.

Veteran Conservati­ve MP David Amess, 69, was talking with voters at a church in the small town of Leighon-sea, east of London, when he was killed on Friday.

The attack has spread fear among MPS, coming just over five years after the similar killing of Labour MP Jo Cox in the febrile run-up to the Brexit referendum.

Police have said they are investigat­ing “a potential motivation linked to extremism”. The investigat­ion is being led by Scotland Yard’s Counter Terrorism Command.

Home Secretary Priti Patel has ordered a review of security measures for lawmakers and told Sky News that “we need to close any gaps” in security provision for MPS, whose work includes regular meetings with constituen­ts, called “surgeries”.

She said that police and parliament­ary authoritie­s were implementi­ng “immediate changes and measures

that are actively being put in place, and discussed with MPS”.

This includes MPS sharing informatio­n on their whereabout­s with police. Close protection at surgeries was also “in considerat­ion right now”, she added.

The Sunday Telegraph reported that uniformed police were guarding

some surgeries following the attack, which prompted calls from some MPS for a pause in face-to-face meetings.

Police said late on Saturday that detectives had until Friday to question the suspected attacker after he was detained under the Terrorism Act, which allowed them to extend his detention. He has not been

charged. British media, citing unnamed official sources, identified the suspect as Ali Harbi Ali.

Reports said he was a British national of Somali descent who had been referred to Prevent, the UK’S official counter-terrorist scheme for those thought to be at risk of radicalisa­tion. —

 ?? Home Secretary ?? We want to ensure it (the Prevent programme) is fit for purpose, robust, doing the right thing, but importantl­y, learning lessons.”
Priti Patel,
Home Secretary We want to ensure it (the Prevent programme) is fit for purpose, robust, doing the right thing, but importantl­y, learning lessons.” Priti Patel,
 ?? AFP ?? People including a veteran pay their respects at the scene of the fatal stabbing of David Amess at Belfairs Methodist Church on Sunday. —
AFP People including a veteran pay their respects at the scene of the fatal stabbing of David Amess at Belfairs Methodist Church on Sunday. —

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