The Guardian (USA)

Libyan held over Reading multiple stabbing 'known to security services'

- Jamie Grierson , Dan Sabbagh, Matthew Weaver, Simon Murphy and Molly Blackall

The suspect in an alleged terror attack that left a teacher and two others dead was known to security services and other authoritie­s, it emerged on Sunday.

Khairi Saadallah, the 25-year-old Libyan refugee held over the stabbings in a Reading park, was on the radar of MI5 in the middle of last year, sources told the Guardian.

He was under investigat­ion as a person who might travel abroad “for extremist reasons”, but sources indicated that the inquiry was closed relatively quickly without any action taken as no genuine threat or immediate risk was identified. Intelligen­ce agencies believe Saadallah had mental health problems,

the sources said.

There was no immediate evidence that the Reading attack was underpinne­d by an allegiance to Islamic State or al-Qaida, although investigat­ions are ongoing. Police said they believed the attacker was acting alone.

Boris Johnson hinted at a fresh crackdown on terror suspects when he said the government was ready to act on any lessons that emerge from the tragedy. The prime minister and other leading public figures condemned the violence and expressed condolence­s to victims’ relatives.

Among the three people killed in the attack shortly before 7pm in Forbury Gardens was a 36-year-old local secondary school teacher, James Furlong. On Sunday evening his parents, Gary and Janet, paid tribute to “a wonderful man … beautiful, intelligen­t, honest and fun … the best son, brother, uncle and partner you could wish for”.

Furlong was head of history, government and politics at Holt school in Wokingham, near Reading. Colleagues and pupils’ parents described him as “passionate”, “gentle” and “caring”.

The school wrote to pupils’ families to notify them that the teacher had been caught up in the attack. The letter described him as a “very kind and gentle man” with a “real sense of duty and care for each and every one of our students”. Lessons on Monday have been cancelled for all year groups, with counsellor­s on site for students and staff to seek support.

Three other people were injured in the attack, which lasted less than five minutes. Two were taken to hospital, with one later discharged and the other described on Sunday as stable.

Saadallah was initially arrested on suspicion of murder, with police not treating the incident as terrorism, but he has now been rearrested under Section 41 of the Terrorism Act 2000, giving police greater powers of detention.

Witnesses described horrific scenes as a knife-wielding attacker stabbed people in the park, which is popular with families, especially amid coronaviru­s lockdown measures. Thames Valley police said they had detained and arrested the suspect within five minutes of the first call at 6.56pm.

As the police investigat­ion continued on Sunday, it emerged Saadallah, who was granted asylum in the UK, was previously on the radar of the security services. He is also understood to have served prison sentences for relatively minor offences not related to terrorism.

The head of counter-terrorism policing, Metropolit­an police assistant commission­er Neil Basu, sought to reassure the public that the attack was an isolated attack, with no accomplice­s being looked for.

He said: “From our inquiries so far, officers have found nothing to suggest that there was anyone else involved in this attack and presently we are not looking for anyone else in relation to this incident.

“Although the motivation for this horrific act is far from certain, counterter­rorism policing have taken responsibi­lity for leading the investigat­ion.”

There were many witnesses to the attacks, which took place in the central

Reading park which is home of the Maiwand Lion statue, the image of which has been adopted by Reading football club and the Reading Post newspaper.

A police officer is said to have tackled the suspected attacker to the ground while bystanders attempted to give CPR before paramedics arrived.

Lawrence Wort, 20, a personal trainer, said he was about 10 metres from the attack. “The park was pretty full, a lot of people sat around drinking with friends, when one lone person walked through, suddenly shouted some unintellig­ible words and went around a large group of around 10, trying to stab them,” he told reporters.

“He stabbed three of them, severely in the neck, and under the arms, and then turned and started running towards me, and we turned and started running. When he realised that he couldn’t catch us, he tried to stab another group sat down. He got one person in the back of the neck and then when he realised everyone was starting to run, he ran out the park.”

Brendan Healy, 55, gave CPR to another man while receiving instructio­ns from medics over the phone, and described seeing another man who had apparently been stabbed in the eye. “There were people prostrate on the grass,” he said of the aftermath of the attack.

If confirmed as a terrorist offence, the attack would be the fourth in the UK since November, when Usman Khan killed two people at Fishmonger­s’ Hall near London Bridge. There have since been terrorist attacks in Whitemoor prison in January and on Streatham High Street, in the capital, in February. The terror threat level remains “substantia­l”.

In a statement recorded in Downing Street, the prime minister said: “If there are lessons that we need to learn about how we handle such cases, how we handle the events leading up to such cases, we will learn those lessons, and we will not hesitate to take action where necessary.”

He added: “If there are changes that need to be made to our legal system to stop such events happening again, we will not hesitate to take that action – as we have before, you will recall, over the automatic early release of terrorist offenders.”

The home secretary, Priti Patel, who prior to the Reading attack had asked officials to draw up reforms of the way foreign national offenders can be deported, said: “This evening we saw a senseless attack on people simply enjoying a Saturday evening with family and friends. My heart, prayers and thoughts are with all of those affected and to the people of Reading who will be deeply shocked and concerned by this terrible incident.”

Patel was said to be up with officials into the early hours of Sunday morning to understand the suspect’s full immigratio­n status and criminal background. “The event will embolden our plans to reform the asylum system and speed up deportatio­ns for foreign national offenders through legislatio­n, which will likely be opposed by the opposition,” a Whitehall source said.

She will visit Reading on Monday to receive a briefing from the chief constable of Thames Valley Police and meet officers who responded on Saturday evening.

Berkshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust declined to comment on reports that the suspect was being treated for mental health conditions. A statement from David Townsend, chief operating officer, said: “On behalf of everyone at Berkshire Healthcare, I would like to express our deepest condolence­s to the families and friends of those who sadly died at Forbury Gardens in Reading yesterday.

“Our thoughts are with everyone affected by this incident, including those members of the public who provided first aid at the scene, and the police officers who responded so quickly. As this is an ongoing police investigat­ion, we are not able to provide any informatio­n.”

Flowers and tributes were laid at the site on Sunday, and civic leaders expressed their shock that such an attack could take place in Reading, which has a population of 340,000. Its last terror attack was in 1993, when a bomb planted by the IRA blew up near the train station. No one was hurt.

called Death by China – despite having spent almost no time in the country and having no grasp of the language.

“Five of Navarro’s books cited a China hand with a particular­ly pithy turn of phrase called Ron Vara, who turned out not to exist. The name is an anagram of Navarro and the imaginary expert operated as an alter ego, confirming the author’s views.”

Navarro’s latest comments about China were as incendiary as Trump’s remarks about testing were, to many, alarming. Experts have sought to dampen fears that the US may face a second wave of infections, but only because the first isn’t over.

“When you have 20,000-plus infections per day, how can you talk about a second wave?” Dr Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health told the Associated Press. “We’re in the first wave. Let’s get out of the first wave before you have a second wave.”

According to Johns Hopkins University, the US has confirmed more than 2.2m cases and nearly 120,000 Covid-19 deaths. The real numbers are believed to be higher.

New cases have shown sudden rises in several states, but not just due to testing – many states, most Republican­led are seeking to reopen from lockdown. The wearing of masks and other public health guidelines has become a political fault line, with many Americans refusing to follow such advice.

Saturday’s rally in Tulsa took place amid climbing case numbers in Oklahoma and against pleas from local health officials not to stage the event at all. Six campaign staffers tested positive, but in his speech Trump said the “bad part” of widespread testing is that it leads to logging more cases.

The president had already used racist language aimed at China, referring to Covid-19 as “kung flu”. He then described testing as a “double-edged sword”. The US had now tested 25 million people, far more than other countries, Trump said, adding: “When you do testing to that extent, you’re gonna find more people, you’re gonna find more cases. So I said to my people slow the testing down.”

Navarro insisted Trump’s comment was “tongue in cheek” and made in a “light moment”. To Tapper’s contention that “a deadly pandemic, where almost 120,000 Americans” have died might not be “really a good subject for a light moment”, Navarro said: “He takes that absolutely seriously.”

On Sunday, Oklahoma reported a record number of new cases, at 478. The state’s previous record of 450 new cases in a day, was set on Thursday.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden criticized Trump for putting politics ahead of the safety and health of Americans. House speaker Nancy Pelosi said the president was “ethically unfit and intellectu­ally unprepared to lead”.

Also on CNN, Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, a potential Biden running mate, said: “This is no time to joke. Even if it were a joke, which it was not, it was an inappropri­ate joke. Do you think the people, the 120,000 families out there who are missing their loved ones thought it was funny?”

Acting homeland security secretary Chad Wolf told NBC’s Meet the Press the White House coronaviru­s taskforce is working with governors to make sure the US “can open up this economy in a safe and reasonable way”.

“I think that’s what we’re seeing,” he said.

Wolf told CBS’s Face the Nation the task force was “on top of all of these outbreaks”, including in Arizona, Texas,

Florida and other states “having hot spots”. The administra­tion, he said, had sent medical equipment, staff and personnel to assist with reopening efforts.

Bottoms also condemned Trump for staging his rally in Tulsa, the site of a historic race massacre, after a month of protests and civil unrest over racism and police brutality, subjects he skipped entirely during his speech.

“That rally was an embarrassm­ent,” she said. “It was absolutely what the nation does not need right now. He did not speak about healing. He did not recognize any of the racial tensions that are happening across our country.

“Instead, he does what he always does. He continues to try and divide us and really inflames the worst in people. And so I just hope that this is a good sign that the country is moving on from him.”

 ??  ?? Khairi Saadallah, who has been arrested over the Reading stabbings. Photograph: Facebook/Khairi Saadallah
Khairi Saadallah, who has been arrested over the Reading stabbings. Photograph: Facebook/Khairi Saadallah

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