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Las Ramblas attack: van hits crowd in tourist area of Barcelona | Las Ramblas attack: van hits crowd in tourist area of Barcelona |
(35 minutes later) | |
A van has crashed into a crowd of people in central Barcelona, with Spanish media saying there have been multiple deaths and injuries, and reports of at least one armed man holed up in a nearby restaurant. | |
Spanish police, who are treating the incident as a terrorist attack, said people had died in the “massive crash” on Las Ramblas, a wide boulevard in an area of the city popular with tourists. | |
Television pictures show that a van came to a halt on top of a Joan Míro mosaic halfway down Las Ramblas, meaning it would have covered more than 500 metres. | |
A photograph released by the public broadcaster RTVE showed three people lying on the ground in the street, apparently being helped by police and others. Catalonia’s TV3 station reported two dead and several injured. | |
The van entered Las Ramblas where it meets the Plaça de Catalunya, then drove towards the port area. | The van entered Las Ramblas where it meets the Plaça de Catalunya, then drove towards the port area. |
Catalan police have tweeted: “We can’t confirm a motive for the events that have taken place in Barcelona, but we have activated the protocol used to respond to attacks.” | |
Local media continue to report at least two dead and many injured. Ambulances and emergency vehicles were still arriving at the scene. | |
According to early reports, the vehicle sped down the centre of the 1km-long road, which is usually packed with people, until it hit a newspaper kiosk and stopped. | |
Witnesses spoke of panic and seeing people covered in blood. Several pushchairs could be seen abandoned at the side of the street. | Witnesses spoke of panic and seeing people covered in blood. Several pushchairs could be seen abandoned at the side of the street. |
Jordi Lino, who was on a bus going down Las Ramblas, said: “First I saw people running and then the van. There were injured people in the middle of the Ramblas.” | |
A taxi driver told TV3 he saw people being run over by the van. | |
TV3 said police sources had confirmed to it that one armed man was holed up in a Turkish restaurant near Las Ramblas and the Boqueria market. | TV3 said police sources had confirmed to it that one armed man was holed up in a Turkish restaurant near Las Ramblas and the Boqueria market. |
But Catalan police said reports of gunfire in the Corte Inglés department store were untrue. They were advising people to follow official sources for updates. | |
At this stage police are saying the number of injured people is unknown. | At this stage police are saying the number of injured people is unknown. |
Metro stations and shops close to site of the crash were closed. | Metro stations and shops close to site of the crash were closed. |
The spokeswoman for a chain of 10 restaurants in the area said that about 600 people were stuck inside their establishments waiting for permission from the police to leave. | |
The Spanish newspaper El País, citing police sources, said the driver of the vehicle fled on foot. | |
Catalan emergency services said people should stay away from the area around Plaça de Catalunya. | Catalan emergency services said people should stay away from the area around Plaça de Catalunya. |
Police have asked people to communicate via social media and messaging instead of phone calls, as mobile telephone coverage is saturated. | |
Mobile phone footage shows panicked, screaming tourists fleeing through the narrow streets beside Las Ramblas. | |
TV3 says there are unconfirmed reports that a second van was following the first but then drove off. | |
Las Ramblas, a street of stalls and shops that cuts through the centre of Barcelona, is one of the city’s top tourist destinations. People walk down a wide, pedestrianised path in the centre of the street, but cars can travel on either side. | Las Ramblas, a street of stalls and shops that cuts through the centre of Barcelona, is one of the city’s top tourist destinations. People walk down a wide, pedestrianised path in the centre of the street, but cars can travel on either side. |
Spain has so far been spared the kind of extremist violence that has occurred in nearby France, Belgium and Germany, but it was hit by what is still Europe’s deadliest jihadi attack in March 2004, when bombs exploded on commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people in an attack claimed by al-Qaida-inspired extremists. | Spain has so far been spared the kind of extremist violence that has occurred in nearby France, Belgium and Germany, but it was hit by what is still Europe’s deadliest jihadi attack in March 2004, when bombs exploded on commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people in an attack claimed by al-Qaida-inspired extremists. |
The latest crash follows terrorist attacks with vehicles in France, Germany and the UK. Last July 86 people were killed in Nice, when a 19-ton truck mowed down people on the beach front. A Christmas market in Berlin was the scene of a similar atrocity in December, when 12 people were killed by a truck packed with steel. In London a speeding van hit pedestrians before attackers launched a knife attack in cafes and restaurants at Borough market in June. Eight people lost their lives in the attack, while at least 48 were wounded. | |
Vehicles have been used in several terrorist attacks in Europe in recent years, including a massacre that claimed 86 lives in the French city of Nice. | Vehicles have been used in several terrorist attacks in Europe in recent years, including a massacre that claimed 86 lives in the French city of Nice. |