The Jerusalem Post

US woman killed in London knife rampage

Israeli teen wounded in attack • Police say no evidence of terrorism link

- • By COSTAS PITAS and MICHAEL HOLDEN

LONDON (Reuters) – A US woman was killed and an Israeli and four other people were wounded by a man with suspected mental health issues who went on a rampage with a knife in central London, but police said there was no evidence that the attack was terrorism related.

Armed police were called at 10:33 p.m. on Wednesday after a Norwegian man of Somali origin started to attack people with a knife in London’s Russell Square, an elegant park near the site of a 2005 suicide bombing.

The victim, a US citizen in her 60s, was treated at the scene but pronounced dead a short time later.

Five other people were wounded in the attack – including an Israeli teenager visiting London with her grandfathe­r.

The Israeli who was stabbed in her arm and was released shortly afterward from the hospital was 18-year-old Yuval Levkovski, touring London with family before going into the army in five days.

“We were a few minutes from the hotel, and heard screams,” she told Army Radio. “There were not many people around. We suddenly saw two people running. I moved toward them and one of them stabbed me with something sharp. I didn’t understand at the time what happened, or that it was a knife.”

Levkovski, from Tel Aviv, said her “Israeli instincts” started to work when she heard the screams.

She said that she does not plan to return home to Israel right away, but will be continuing her trip with her grandfathe­r.

Four other men were treated in the hospital, though three of them were later discharged. Nationals from Australia, Britain, Israel and the United States were among those hurt.

“All of the work we have done so far increasing­ly points to this tragic incident as having been triggered by mental health issues,” said London Metropolit­an Police Assistant Commission­er Mark Rowley.

“We believe this was a spontaneou­s attack and that the victims were selected at random,” said Rowley, who is Britain’s most senior anti-terrorism officer.

“So far we have found no evidence of radicaliza­tion that would suggest that the man in our custody is in any way motivated by terrorism,” said Rowley. Initially he said that terrorism was a line of inquiry.

Police, who arrived within six minutes of being called, used a Taser electric shock gun while detaining the 19-year-old suspect. He was later arrested on suspicion of murder.

Police cordoned off the southern part of the square, which sits at the heart of London’s university area and is close to landmarks such as the British Museum, for several hours as forensics officers examined the attack scene.

Later, workmen hosed blood off the pavement.

London’s Sadiq Khan, the first Muslim mayor of a major Western capital, called for vigilance and urged Londoners to report anything suspicious to the police, who increased their presence in the capital.

“The safety of all Londoners is my No. 1 priority and my heart goes out to the victims of the incident in Russell Square and their loved ones,” he said.

Just hours before the Russell Square attack, London’s police chief said that he would deploy an additional 600 armed officers across the capital to protect against attacks.

London counter-terrorism police chiefs have previously warned that Islamic State was seeking to radicalize vulnerable people with mental health issues to carry out attacks. In some operations, police commanders have taken advice from specialist psychologi­sts.

Islamist militants hit London with coordinate­d suicide bombings on July 7, 2005, killing 52 people. One of the bombs detonated on a bus close to Russell Square.

Since then, dozens of plots have been foiled and there have been smaller-scale attacks, such as the beheading of an off-duty soldier by militant Islamists in a London street in May 2013.

A man who attacked passengers at a London undergroun­d train station in December was jailed for life earlier this month. The judge said the attacker was suffering from paranoid schizophre­nia at the time of the offense, but may have been motivated by events in Syria.

Herb Keinon contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? LONDON POLICEMEN stand guard as municipal workers clean the scene of the knife attack that killed one person and wounded four others on Wednesday in the city’s Russell Square.
(Reuters) LONDON POLICEMEN stand guard as municipal workers clean the scene of the knife attack that killed one person and wounded four others on Wednesday in the city’s Russell Square.

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