This article is from the source 'independent' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/russell-square-stabbing-attack-news-latest-not-terror-related-say-police-after-norwegian-suspect-a7171616.html
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Russell Square stabbing attack 'not terror related', say police after interviewing Norwegian suspect | Russell Square stabbing attack 'not terror related', say police after interviewing Norwegian suspect |
(about 5 hours later) | |
A Norwegian man was being held in custody on Thursday on suspicion of murdering an American woman in a “random” stabbing rampage in central London. | |
Investigators say the 19-year-old suspect, who is of Somali origin and moved to the UK aged five, is mentally ill and has no known links to terror groups or radicalisation. | |
Witnesses described their horror as a knife-wielding man launched his attack on passers-by in Russell Square, stabbing anyone he could reach late on Wednesday evening. | |
A cyclist said he was flagged down by a Spanish family to call an ambulance, saying he called an ambulance as he watched one of the tourists cradle the dying woman in her lap. | |
Fernando, from Brazil, said: “I thought they were friends, but then I realised that they were just passing. No-one knew each other. | |
”The moment the police arrived, they asked them if the man had been shouting. They said that he didn't say anything. | |
“They said that when he stabbed the people he didn't shout or scream anything.” | |
The American woman, in her 60s, reportedly used her last words to warn passers-by trying to save her that the attacker was among them, saying: “He’s still here, he’s still here.” | |
Paramedics attempted to save her life but she was later pronounced dead at the scene, police said. | |
Pol O'Geibheannaigh, who was walking back from a nearby cinema with friends, said he saw a woman lying in a pool of blood as Russell Square swarmed with armed police. | |
“That level of police presence I haven't seen since 7/7 and I was here - I live around the corner,” he added. | |
Bombs exploded in nearby Russell Square station and Tavistock Square as part of the al-Qaeda inspired attacks that killed 52 people and injured 700 on 7 July 2005. | |
A witness who gave his name as Michael said he heard screaming and ran to find a young woman lying on the floor bleeding from a knife wound in her back. | |
“She was lying on the floor with a friend hugging her,” he told MailOnline. | |
She was among another five people injured - two other women and three men from Australia, the US, Israel and the UK. | |
Four of the wounded victims were discharged from hospital on Thursday, while a British man remained in a serious condition with a stab wound to his stomach. | |
Mark Rowley, the Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said armed officers arrived within six minutes of being alerted to the attack at around 10.30pm. | |
They used a Taser to restrain the suspect as he continued trying to stab other victims in the street, in what was praised as the “minimum necessary force”. | |
“Whilst the investigation is not yet complete - all of the work that we have done so far, increasingly points to this tragic incident as having been triggered by mental health issues,” Mr Rowley said. | |
“At this time we believe this was a spontaneous attack and the victims were selected at random.” | “At this time we believe this was a spontaneous attack and the victims were selected at random.” |
Describing the suspect as a Norwegian national of Somali origin, the counter-terrorism chief said his background was not believed to be “relevant to the motivation for his actions”. | |
“So far we have found no evidence of radicalisation or anything that would suggest the man in our custody was motivated by terrorism,” he added. | |
When asked why initial police statements had named terror as a line of investigation, Mr Rowley told reporters detectives were considering many options in light of recent attacks in Europe and the “current climate of threat”. | |
The unnamed suspect and his family have been interviewed, as well as witnesses, and a full intelligence review has been conducted alongside house searches in London. | |
Norway’s National Criminal Investigation Service said it had been informed by their British counterparts and would offer assistance in the case, adding that the suspect emigrated in 2002. | |
Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said a “normal night out ended in horrific circumstances” for the victims. | |
He deployed hundreds of armed and unarmed police across London to reassure the public – a move already planned after a string of attacks in Europe – adding: “We will protect our capital and those who live, work and visit our city.” | |