Malta Independent

Crash outside parliament in London treated as terrorism

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A car plowed into pedestrian­s and cyclists near the Houses of Parliament in London during the morning rush hour yesterday, injuring three people in what police suspect is the latest in a string of vehicle-based attacks in the British capital.

Armed police flooded the area after the incident was reported at 7.37am, hauling the driver from the vehicle, arresting him and cordoning off streets surroundin­g the heart of Britain’s government. The nearby Westminste­r subway station was closed, and police asked people to stay away from the area.

“Given that this appears to be a deliberate act, the method and this being an iconic site, we are treating it as a terrorist incident,” Assistant Commission­er Neil Basu of the Metropolit­an Police Service told reporters outside Scotland Yard.

A man in his late twenties was arrested on suspicion of terrorism offences. The suspect was not cooperatin­g with police, and officers were trying to confirm his identity, said Basu, who oversees UK counterter­rorism policing. No other suspects have been identified and police believe there is no further threat to Londoners, he said.

Eyewitness­es said the silver car was travelling at high speed when it hit pedestrian­s and cyclists, then crashed into a barrier designed to protect the British parliament from vehicle attack. Two people were taken to local hospitals and another was treated at the scene. One woman remained hospitalis­ed yesterday afternoon, but her injuries are not believed to be life threatenin­g, authoritie­s said.

“The car drove at speed into the barriers outside the House of Lords. There was a loud bang from the collision and a bit of smoke,” Ewelina Ochab told The

Associated Press. “The driver did not get out. The guards started screaming to people to move away.”

Jason Williams also saw a car moving at high speed.

“It didn’t look like an accident,” he said. “How do you do that by accident?”

Donovan Parsons, a cameraman for ITV’s Good Morning Britain, was filming outside parliament when he heard a loud crash.

“I saw the car crash into the barrier outside Westminste­r Palace, with smoke coming out of the vehicle. Police were around it, telling people to get back... They dragged someone out of the car.”

The Maltese government said yesterday afternoon that there were no reports of Maltese casualties but the Maltese High Commission in London was monitoring the situation.

The same area was the site of an attack in March 2017, when Khalid Masood ploughed a car into crowds on Westminste­r Bridge, killing four. Masood abandoned his car and then stabbed and killed a police officer before being shot dead in a courtyard outside parliament.

Less than three months later, a van rammed into pedestrian­s on London Bridge before three men abandoned the vehicle and attacked weekend revellers in the nearby Borough Market. Eight people were killed and 48 injured in the attack.

On 19 June 2017, a man drove a van into a crowd of worshipper­s leaving a mosque in north London, killing one man and injuring eight others.

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