Arab News

May insists police happy with their resources

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LONDON: Police identified two of the London attackers on Monday after Britain’s third terror assault in less than three months, as Prime Minister Theresa May came under mounting pressure over security just days ahead of elections.

National counter-terrorism police chief Mark Rowley named two of the three slain assailants as Khuram Butt and Rachid Redouane, revealing that Butt had been known to security services.

The aftermath of Saturday night’s rampage, which left seven dead and dozens wounded, dominated the campaign trail ahead of Thursday’s general election.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said he would support calls for May to quit, as she had overseen a sharp reduction in police numbers in her past job as interior minister.

The attack, claimed by Daesh, saw three men wearing fake suicide vests use a white van to mow down people on London Bridge and then slash and stab revellers enjoying a Saturday night in the bustling Borough Market area.

Armed police reacted swiftly, killing the attackers within eight minutes with 50 shots. Butt was 27 and a British citizen born in Pakistan. He appeared in a Channel 4 documentar­y entitled “The Jihadis Next Door” about British extremists that was broadcast last year, local media reported.

Redouane was 30 and “claimed to be Moroccan and Libyan.” Police said he also used the name of Rachid Elkhdar and a different date of birth that gave his age as 25.

Both men lived in Barking, an ethnically diverse part of east London where police carried out several raids on Sunday and Monday. Ten people are currently in custody.

Police chief Cressida Dick said investigat­ors had seized “a huge amount of forensic material” from the van.

“A very high priority for us is to try to understand whether they were working with anybody else,” she told BBC television.

Dick and Mayor Sadiq Khan visited London Bridge as commuters returned to work after some security cordons were removed.

Hundreds of mourners turned out later Monday for a somber vigil on nearby Tower Bridge.

“To the sick and evil extremists who commit these hideous crimes, we will defeat you. You will not win,” Khan said to applause.

The Amaq news agency, which is affiliated with Daesh, said the attacks were carried out by “a detachment of fighters” from Daesh.

May said Britain’s response to the terror threat must change after the three attacks which in total left 34 dead and some 200 injured.

“We cannot and must not pretend that things can continue as they are,” she said, adding there was “far too much tolerance of extremism in our country.”

But May’s own record came under fire from Labour, which — according to opinion polls questioned for their reliabilit­y — has closed the gap on her Conservati­ves ahead of Thursday’s election.

Campaignin­g resumed on Monday after being suspended for a day.

Corbyn noted that for six years, police numbers fell while May was in charge of security as interior minister, implementi­ng a budget-cutting drive.

Asked by ITV television if he backed the calls for May to resign, he said: “Indeed I would.”

May insisted London police were happy with their resources, while counter-terrorism budgets had been protected and the number of armed officers had increased.

 ??  ?? Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick, second left, and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, third left, are shown across London Bridge on Monday to see the site of the terror attack near Borough Market. (AFP)
Metropolit­an Police Commission­er Cressida Dick, second left, and London Mayor Sadiq Khan, third left, are shown across London Bridge on Monday to see the site of the terror attack near Borough Market. (AFP)

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