London attack: ISIS claims follower was behind rampage
London attack: ISIS claims follower was behind rampage
Police investigating the deadliest London terror attack in 12 years have arrested eight people in raids around Britain, as an ISIS-affiliated news agency claimed that the extremist group was behind the outrage.
Prime
Minister Theresa May revealed the perpetrator was British born and once
linked to violent extremism, in a statement to Parliament a day after
it was locked down when the assailant breached its perimeter.
May said the attacker --
whose rampage claimed three lives and injured 40 -- had been
investigated by security services but was regarded as a "peripheral
figure." Authorities did not know he was about to mount an assault, she
said.
Britain's most senior counterterror police officer said inquiries were continuing in London, Birmingham and elsewhere after the lone attacker plowed a car into crowds of people, killing two people, before stabbing a police officer dead in the grounds of the UK Parliament.
A
tweet from ISIS-affiliated news agency Amaq said the attacker was "a
soldier" of ISIS inspired by its message. However, ISIS has provided no
evidence for any direct links to the assailant, whom it did not name.
Latest developments:
• Injured include 10 nationalities besides the British, among them French, South Korean and American.
• Mayor of London Sadiq Khan said the swift action of London police had prevented more deaths.
• The House of Commons reopened after lawmakers remembered in silence the victims of the attack.
• Addresses were searched in Birmingham and elsewhere and a number of arrests were made.
• Queen Elizabeth II voices her "thoughts, prayers, and deepest sympathy" for all those affected\
An armed police officer patrols by a security cordon set up along Whitehall by the Houses of Parliament on March 23. |
May: 'Our values will prevail'
In a defiant speech, May vowed that Britain's freedoms and liberties would remain undiminished.
"Yesterday
an act of terrorism tried to silence our democracy. But today we meet
as normal -- as generations have done before us, and as future
generations will continue to do -- to deliver a simple message: we are
not afraid. And our resolve will never waiver in the face of terrorism.
"And
we meet here, in the oldest of all Parliaments, because we know that
democracy -- and the values it entails -- will always prevail."
She said the police officer who was killed in the attack, PC Keith Palmer, was "every inch a hero and his actions will never be forgotten."
May
said Wednesday's attacker was born in Britain and was investigated
"some years ago" in relation to concerns about "violent extremism." But
he was not part of the "current intelligence picture."
May
said the current threat level for Britain -- which has been at severe,
the second highest, for some time -- would not be raised to critical
because there was no specific intelligence that an attack was imminent.
Since 2013, police, security and intelligence agencies have successfully
disrupted 13 separate terrorist plots in Britain, she said.
"We
know the threat from Islamist terrorism is very real. But while the
public should remain utterly vigilant they should not -- and will not --
be cowed by this threat," she said.
CNN
Terrorism Analyst Paul Cruickshank said the language used by ISIS
asserting the attack was by one of its "soldiers" did not necessarily
mean the group was claiming direct connections to the attacker. This
phrasing has been used in the past by the group for attacks ISIS
believes it helped inspire, he said.
Investigation gathers pace
Mark
Rowley, the lead officer in the UK for counter-terrorism policing, said
hundreds of detectives worked through the night in a fast-moving
inquiry. Their investigation focused on the attacker's motivation,
preparation and associates, he said.
Overnight,
officers from the Metropolitan Police searched addresses in Birmingham,
central England, and elsewhere. Arrests were made in Birmingham and
London.
"It is still our belief -- which
continues to be borne out by our investigation -- that this attacker
acted alone yesterday and was inspired by international terrorism," he
said. "To be explicit, at this stage, we have no specific information
about further threats to the public."
Rowley
told journalists late Wednesday that police were working on the
assumption there was an Islamist dimension to the attack, the first
mass-casualty terrorist outrage in Britain since 2005 when 52 people died in the July 7 bomb attacks on the London public transportation system.
A UK official told CNN the working theory was that the attack was ISIS "inspired or copycat."
The car rental company whose vehicle was used in the attack said it was cooperating with the police.
London
Mayor Sadiq Khan told CNN that London was protected by the best police
and security services in the world. "I'm confident that we are doing all
that we can to keep our city safe, to keep Londoners safe and to keep
visitors safe," he said.
Victims named
The
area around Westminster, the heart of the British government since the
16th century, was teeming with Londoners and visitors when the attack
began.
The officer killed at
Carriage Gates, an entrance to Parliament, was named as Keith Palmer, a
member of the Metropolitan Police's parliamentary and diplomatic
protection command unit. He was a husband and father, and had served in
the Met for 15 years.
The mayor of Betanzos in northwest
Spain, Ramon Garcia Vasquez, named the woman who died as Frade, 43, and
told CNN that her family and relatives live in the town. Vasquez said
Frade had lived in London for several years with her Portuguese husband.
"We are totally overwhelmed by the news and we send our condolences to the people in London," Garcia Vasquez added.
A
number of tourists were among 40 people hurt in the assault, including
five South Koreans and three French high school students, according to
officials from both countries. One Australian had been hospitalized,
officials there said. A Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman said one
Chinese tourist was slightly injured.
May
listed 10 foreign nationalities among the victims: Three French
children, two Romanians, four South Koreans, one German, one Pole, one
Irish, one Chinese, one Italian, one American, and two Greeks. Twelve
Britons were also injured.
A
candlelit vigil will be held Thursday evening in Trafalgar Square, not
far from Westminster, to show solidarity and remember the victims, the
mayor's office announced.
London police leaders held a moment's silence Thursday morning to remember the attack victims.
One member of the government, Tobias Ellwood, was lauded as a hero after attempting to save Palmer.
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