WORLD NEWS
FEBRUARY 2, 2020
UPDATED 31 MINUTES AGO
Police shoot man dead after London stabbing incident described as terrorism
Elizabeth Piper
LONDON (Reuters) - Police shot dead a man in south London on Sunday after two people were stabbed in what police described as a terrorism-related incident.
Armed officers shot the man in Streatham, a busy residential district south of the River Thames.
“The circumstances are being assessed; the incident has been declared as terrorist-related,” the police said on Twitter.
Police said later the man they had shot had been pronounced dead, and two people had been wounded.
“We await updates on their condition,” police said, adding the scene of the incident was now fully contained.
Karker Tahir, a man who was working nearby, told Sky News that the man was shot three times. Police had told people in the area to leave because the man had a bomb in his bag, Tahir said.
A Western security source said the incident was related to Islamist militancy.
Armed police cordoned off the area and said people should avoid the area.
Several videos of the scene were posted on Twitter, but not verified by Reuters. In one, filmed from inside a shop across the road, a man can be seen lying on the street while at least two armed police officers point their guns from behind an unmarked car with its blue lights flashing.
At least one helicopter flew overhead and police cars were in surrounding streets, with the area blocked off by tape.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Twitter: “Thank you to all emergency services responding to the incident in Streatham, which the police have now declared as terrorism-related”.
“My thoughts are with the injured and all those affected,” he added.
The last such incident in London was in November, when police shot dead a man wearing a fake suicide vest who stabbed two people to death and wounded three more before being wrestled to the ground by bystanders.
That attack was carried out by a man with Islamist militant sympathies. He had been jailed for terrorism and released early.
London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, said in a statement after Sunday’s incident: “Terrorists seek to divide us and to destroy our way of life - here in London we will never let them succeed.”
Reporting by Elizabeth Piper; Writing by Peter Graff and Frances Kerry; Editing by David Goodman and Angus MacSwan
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