Arab Times

Glasgow stabbings not treated as terrorism acts

IS militant jailed in UK

-

LONDON, June 27, (AP): A male suspect stabbed and wounded a police officer before he was shot dead in Glasgow on Friday. Authoritie­s are not treating the incident that left five other men wounded as terrorism, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said.

The suspect died at a Glasgow hotel that appeared to be largely housing asylum-seekers and refugees. The 42-year-old police officer stabbed during the incident at the Park Inn Hotel on Friday was in a critical but stable condition. Five men between the ages of 17 and 53 also were hospitaliz­ed. Sturgeon said, “It’s been a dreadful afternoon for the city of Glasgow.” She says police are still investigat­ing and she urged the public to avoid speculatio­n.

“The police have just confirmed that at this stage they are not treating this as a terrorist incident,” Sturgeon said. “But of course, there are still details yet to be determined.”

Sturgeon said she had spoken with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who expressed his concern and sympathies.

“It’s been a dreadful afternoon for the city of Glasgow,” Sturgeon said. “Clearly there is already much speculatio­n around this incident, which remains under investigat­ion.”

Steve Johnson, assistant chief constable at Police Scotland, said officers were on the scene within two minutes of reports of an incident at 12:50 pm, and that armed police arrived shortly afterwards.

“The incident was quickly contained,” he said.

Police weren’t searching for anyone else.

The Scottish Police Federation, which represents the large majority of Scottish police officers, said it has notified the family of the injured officer.

Craig Milroy, who witnessed the aftermath from a nearby office building, said he saw four people taken away in ambulances.

“I saw a man lying on the ground, of African descent, with no shoes on,” Milroy said. “He was on the ground with someone holding his side. I don’t know if it was a bullet wound, a stab wound, or what it was.”

Milroy said the man was one of the four taken away by paramedics and believed him to be a victim.

Also:

LONDON: An Islamic State militant who encouraged mass murder in Germany has been sentenced to at least nine years in prison in Britain.

Fatah Abdullah, 35, had been charged under Britain’s

terrorism laws with encouragin­g another person to plow a car into crowds, attack people with a meat cleaver and detonate bombs, “with the aim of killing and/or causing serious injury.”

The incitement took place between April 9 and Dec 11, 2018.

Abdullah, who was born in Iran but was living in the northern English city of Newcastle

after receiving asylum, was arrested after a joint investigat­ion by British and German police.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait