The Mail on Sunday

‘Lone wolf’ drove at Palace police and hit them with 4ft sword

PCs injured as they grappled with terror suspect shouting out ‘Allahu Akbar’

- By Ian Gallagher, Martin Beckford and Abul Taher

A TERROR suspect deliberate­ly drove at police outside Buckingham Palace then attacked three unarmed officers with a 4ft sword, it was revealed yesterday.

Before launching his assault just after 8.30pm on Friday, the 26-yearold man repeatedly screamed ‘Allahu Akbar’.

Watched by horrified tourists, the brave officers managed to wrestle him to the ground in front of the Palace gates.

He was finally restrained after being sprayed with CS gas. Two of the PCs suffered cuts to their hands during the struggle.

They were later taken to hospital by ambulance but their injuries were described as minor.

Neither the Queen, who is on holiday at Balmoral Castle, nor any other members of the Royal Family were in residence at the time.

It is believed the attacker, from Luton, who is thought to be of Bangladesh­i origin, was a ‘lone wolf ’, although police will examine possible links to terror groups.

Scotland Yard said he was arrested under the Terrorism Act and is being held at a Central London police station.

Security sources said he did not feature in any ‘active’ investigat­ions, while other sources said he had previously suffered mental health problems.

The incident began when the knifeman, who wore a light- coloured T- shirt and jeans, drove around the Victoria Memorial in front of the Palace.

Swerving his blue Toyota Prius into traffic cones separating his lane from a ‘restricted area’, he seemed destined for a collision with a marked police van. But at the last moment he skidded to a halt in front of it.

As three unarmed PCs jumped out and approached the Toyota, the suspect reached for a sword in the footwell.

Emma Bell, 28, a broker from Fulham, West London, saw three or four police offices dragging him from the scene and pinning him to ground at the side of the road.

‘There was blood on his shirt and blood on his face,’ she told The Mail on Sunday. ‘ He looked normal; average height, average build, clean shaven. He wasn’t moving when he was on the ground; it looked as if he was unconsciou­s.’

Another witness, Kiana Williamson, said: ‘We turned up and there was one police van and one car,

‘There was blood on his shirt and on his face’

there was also a civilian’s car that had veered towards the police.

‘More police were arriving on to the scene and the man was fighting back.’ Another witness said: ‘My partner saw a sword…as well as a policeman with blood on him, looking like his hand or chest was injured. The police officer had the sword in his hand, walking away with it.’ She said that tourists ran away from the scene.

‘The police didn’t just run up to the car. There was some shouting prior to this, I couldn’t tell you what. I was a bit panicked, then I went to the small crowd as this seemed the safest place to be, on the memorial.’

A taxi driver at the scene added: ‘I asked an officer if he got away, and he said that there was only one attacker and t wo coppers got whacked on their hands.’

The attack happened just hours after a 30-year-old Somalian man was shot dead in Brussels following a machete attack on a group of soldiers. Because of its symbolic value, a Buckingham Palace atrocity would represent a major coup for Islamic State and extremists inspired by their barbarity.

Earlier on Friday, police urged people to be extra vigilant over the Bank Holiday weekend amid an increased risk of terrorism.

Last week The Mail on Sunday

disclosed that Special Forces solders driving specially adapted civilian vehicles will patrol Britain’s streets to thwart an IS atrocity over the long weekend. Security sources said elite troops will mingle with revellers and tourists at sites considered most at risk.

Friday’s terror attack was the f ourth i n London alone si nce March, when 52-year-old Khalid Masood drove a car into pedestrian­s on Westminste­r Bridge, killing four, before ramming into the perimeter fence of the Palace of Westminste­r and fatally stabbing an unarmed policeman.

On June 3, eight people were kil l ed and many others were injured in an attack on London Bridge and Borough Market.

A few weeks later, a van was driven into worshipper­s near a mosque in Finsbury Park. Yester- day, Commander Dean Haydon, the head of the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, said: ‘I would like to pay tribute to the bravery and profession­alism of these officers who quickly brought this incident under control.

‘Their vigilance, courage and the swiftness of their response demonstrat­es how our officers are protecting the public at this time.’

He said police were carrying out ‘searches in the Luton area’ adding: ‘ While we cannot speculate on what the man was intending to do – this will be determined during the course of the investigat­ion – it is only right that we investigat­e this as a terrorist incident at this time.’

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan hailed the police response as ‘heroic and profession­al’ and thanked officers for ‘ e nsuri ng t hat not a single member of the public was injured’.

He added: ‘Terrorists who seek to harm us and destroy our way of life will never succeed. London stands more united than ever.’

Ken Marsh, chairman of the Metropolit­an Police Federation that represents rank-and-file officers, said: ‘As always my thoughts go out to my colleagues who, without fear or favour, put themselves in harm’s way to keep the public safe.’

But he added: ‘I’d have liked to have seen them have Taser, then they could have dealt with it differ- ently, but we are not an armed services. I’m wholly opposed to that.’

Kevin Hurley, a former Detective Chief Superinten­dent in the Met and ex-Police and Crime Commission­er, said: ‘They need sidearms to protect us the public in our streets and shopping centres. When are we going to get real in this country? He could have chopped their heads off.’

The Buckingham Palace attacker is the latest in a long line of terror suspects to come from Luton.

Banned Is la mist group alMuhajiro­un (ALM) was long active in the Bedfordshi­re town, a quarter of whose 217,000 residents are Muslim, and many of the group’s members have been jailed while other local jihadis have been killed or have travelled to Syria.

Westminste­r Bridge murderer Khalid Masood was put under sur- veillance by MI5 while he lived in Luton because of his interest in ALM and its notorious hate preacher leader Anjem Choudary.

Earlier this year, five men were jailed for drumming up support for Islamic State after an undercover policeman infiltrate­d their meetings in Luton, with one of the extremists recorded talking about ‘ 40 trucks driving down Oxford Street full of explosives’.

One of them was the brother of Luton delivery driver Junead Khan, who was last year jailed for plotting to kill US soldiers outside an air base.

A family of 12 from Luton all travelled to Syria in 2015 to join Islamic State.

Four jihadists from Luton were locked up in 2013 over a plan to bomb a Territoria­l Army HQ by driving a remote control car packed with explosives under its gate.

Councillor Hazel Simmons, leader of Luton Borough Council, said yesterday: ‘We are shocked by last night’s events and will do everything in our power to help the police investigat­ion.

‘We are talking with Luton’s community leaders...Luton will stand united in harmony and in opposition to terrorism at this time.’

‘Police need sidearms to protect the public’

Additional reporting: Padraic Flanagan, Simon Murphy and Ned Donovan

 ??  ?? LOCKDOWN:
Police cordon off Buckingham Palace in the wake of the attack
LOCKDOWN: Police cordon off Buckingham Palace in the wake of the attack

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