Western Mail

US van attack victims honoured at night walk

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THE eight people killed in the New York terror attack were remembered with a night time walk down the riverfront esplanade near the scene of Tuesday’s atrocity.

Some of those marching carried candles as city lights twinkled on the water while others pushed bicycles in solidarity with the victims, who were struck on the long bike path that runs along Manhattan’s Hudson River waterfront.

The mourners included Harry Kassen, a student at the Manhattan school where one of the victims, Nicholas Cleves, 23, worked parttime.

“You never think it is going to be someone you know,” said Mr Kassen, 17. He said he’d just recently worked with Cleves on lighting and sound for a school performanc­e.

“We were up in the tech booth, chatting. Then, two weeks later, here we are. And he’s gone,” he said.

The march began near the spot where authoritie­s say Sayfullo Saipov, 29, from Uzbekistan, steered a van onto a bike path and sped towards the World Trade Centre.

He struck cyclists and pedestrian­s in his path and was shot by a police officer after crashing the vehicle into a school bus.

Two women carried the flag of Argentina, in remembranc­e of the five people from that country who were killed when the van ran into a group of friends who had come to New York together to celebrate the 30th anniversar­y of their graduation.

The memorial walk and vigil took place hours after several of the Argentinia­n survivors of the attack visited a severely injured member of their group, Martin Marro, of Newton, Massachuse­tts, to tell him which of his friends had died.

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