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Sunday 21 June 2020 17:42
Three people have died and another three lie injured after being stabbed by a knife-wielding assailant in a park in Reading on Saturday evening, Thames Valley Police have confirmed.
The attack took place at around 7pm in Forbury Gardens in the town centre, with police subsequently arresting 25-year-old Libyan national Khairi Saadallah at the scene on suspicion of murder. They now say the are investigating the matter as terror-related.
In response to the “appalling” incident, prime minister Boris Johnson has said that “if there are changes that need to be made to our legal system to stop such events happening again, we will not hesitate to take that action”.
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“First and foremost our thoughts are with the families of those who lost loved ones in the horrific incident last night and we wish our very best to those still injured,” Thames Valley Police Federation Chairman Craig O’Leary said in a statement.
“There can be no doubt that the swift response of our Thames Valley Police colleagues saved further harm from being caused and potentially more lives from being lost.
“There are barely words to describe their bravery – officers who ran towards danger with the sole thought of protecting the public we serve. Other colleagues valiantly rushed to the scene to try and save and preserve life.
“While the investigation into this incident continues, what we can say is the public can rightly be proud of their emergency services today. We are offering our colleagues involved in this incident our full support.”
A letter from the school, which has been shared online, describes Mr Furlong as a “kind and gentle man” who had a “real sense of duty and cared for each and every one of our students”.
It continues: “He truly inspired everyone he taught through his passion for his subject and his dedication. He was determined that our students would develop a critical awareness of global issues and in doing so become active citizens and have a voice.”
Former pupils have described him as “simply the best”.
The Independent.
There has been a marked increase in Islamist propaganda online in recent months, while at the same time the number of referrals to the government’s main anti-radicalisation programme, Prevent, have fallen by more than 50 per cent, the largest ever in the 10 years the initiative has been running, our defence editor Kim Sengupta reports.
Isis communication channels have been urging adherents in the West, including those in the UK, to carry out attacks, because Europe and the US have been weakened and left disorganised by the coronavirus pandemic.
Security officials point to a number of recent terror-related incidents in Europe. Spanish police arrested an alleged Moroccan Isis supporter in Barcelona on the suspicion that he was planning to carry out attacks last month. A 29-year-old man was arrested in Paris last month after attacking two motorcyclists and then declared after being arrested: “I did it for Isis.” A 33-year-old Sudanese man was charged with alleged terrorist offences and murders after the killing of two people in the town of Romans-sur-lsere in southeastern France.
In April, the national coordinator for the Prevent counter-extremism programme told The Independent that Isis supporters were “encouraging people to target the places that appear most vulnerable”.
The suspect, a 25-year-old Libyan asylum seeker called Khairi Saadallah, came to the attention of the security and intelligence agencies in 2019 when he was seeking to join an Islamist group in the Middle East, our defence editor Kim Sengupta reports.
Mr Saadallah was put under surveillance, but the investigation was scaled down when the journey did not take place. He was subsequently jailed after being convicted of a minor crime.
Mr Saadallah is believed to have arrived in the UK several years ago and had claimed that his family had suffered in the violence which began in the country after the overthrow of the regime of Muammar Gaddafi. Extremist Islamist groups have carried out attacks in Libya as well as neighbouring Tunisia, but it is not known at present whether he had any connection with any of the groups.
The security agencies are also investigating whether Mr Saadallah had been indoctrinated by Islamic extremism. The police are looking at fellow prisoners he may have met while he was said to have been in prison serving a minor, non-terror related sentence.
The security agencies are also looking at whether Saadallah was influenced by material online and whether this had taken place during the months of lockdown. One official said it was, at this stage, a possible line of inquiry.
Read the full report here:
Another remains in a stable condition under observation, a spokesperson told PA earlier this afternoon.
“It’s horrific that it happened at all wherever it happened, and across Reading, across the country there will be communities really upset and worried about this, united in their grief,” the Labour leader said. “And all of our thoughts are with those who have lost someone in this.”
He added: “It’s very important that the investigation runs its course but I will want to work with the government in response to this, to look at whether there’s lessons that can be learned, whether there need to be changes to the law.
“But I think as a constructive opposition, I will want to speak to the prime minister to discuss how together, we can improve the response, learn from this. The investigation must be completed, but of course, this is not a time for party politics.”
Mr Johnson has said “if there are changes that need to be made to our legal system to stop such events happening again, we will not hesitate to take that action, as we have before you will recall, over the automatic early release of terrorist offenders”.
He said the suspect was tackled by police, telling reporters: “When he got arrested his hand was full of blood, I could see the blood on his hand. He wasn’t resisting or anything, even though there were like four or five police officers on top of him.
“He had a very trim beard, not much on his cheeks, he was a young guy. He had like a black T-shirt or something on, he was on the ground I couldn’t really see.
“To me it looked very weird because he didn’t say a word. He didn’t care, he was just staring… he was just completely silent. He wasn’t even blinking, he looked really weird.”
“We also had a number of people in the park that were witnesses to this incident and they saw the terrible tragedy unfold.
“So you can imagine both for my officers but also for those that were involved it was very distressing and we are doing all that we can to make sure we are supporting them as well as progressing the criminal inquiry.”
Mr Campbell did not identify the victims and said Thames Valley Police were still in the process of contacting their next of kin.
“It would be inappropriate to share any further details until we have done that,” he said. “We don’t foresee that there will be any further risk in respect of this matter and we are not looking for anybody else at this time.”
But he said the force would continue with their “reassurance patrols” around Reading, adding: “There will be an increased police presence for some time.”
One neighbour from the same floor of the building, who did not wish to be named, told PA: “I’ve only spoken to him for 30 minutes, I didn’t know the guy but it makes me scared. I have a son. I had no idea he could do something like this.”
Another resident, Nathalie Hickson, said: “I heard on the radio that there had been stabbings, then I could see a helicopter so I knew there was something major going on.
“There were loads of police, all sorts of cars, van. There wasn’t noise at first, like waiting for something to happen, with police, counter-terrorism all here.
“Basically it was like watching a film, I was scared, petrified. You just don’t know what’s going to happen next. I heard explosions going off. It’s just horrendous for the people who have gone through.”
There is not believed to be a wider risk to the public and there is nothing to suggest anyone else was involved in the attack, he reaffirms.
Asked during his interview whether the UK could expect more attacks in the coming months, Boris Johnson replied: “I see no reason to draw that conclusion but I do think that clearly if there are lessons to be learned from this particular case then we will learn them.”
Asked if he was doing enough to protect the public from terror, the prime minister said: “I don’t want to pre-empt the police and their work in their investigation into what exactly happened in this case.
“But I just want to repeat, if there are lessons to be learned, if there are changes that need to be made to our legal system to stop such events happening again, we will not hesitate to take that action, as we have before you will recall , over the automatic early release of terrorist offenders.”
In the wake of the Fishmongers’ Hall and Streatham attacks in London, both of which were carried out by released terrorists, MPs are mulling plans to allow judges to increase sentences for any serious crime by finding a “terrorist connection” – rather than the small list of crimes currently subject to that measure, such as murder, hijacking and causing explosions.
A group of three friends leaving flowers outside the Reading park told reporters they did not know any victims personally but wanted to show support, saying either they or their friends could have been attacked.
Tom, 20, who has always lived in Reading, told the PA: “I’ve spent a lot of time in that park. For me personally it feels like an attack on our area.”
“I’m still messaging people, making sure everyone’s okay. I’ve put some flowers down as I’ve lived here my whole life.”
“I am in regular contact with police & security services who continue with their investigations. My thanks once again goes to our amazing emergency service workers.”
our security correspondent Lizzie Dearden reports.
It is the fourth suspected terrorist knife attack in six months, following the stabbings at Fishmongers’ Hall in November, HMP Whitemoor prison in January and Streatham in February.
A minute’s silence is to be held tomorrow at 10am, behind closed doors due to social distancing.
One of the patients admitted to Royal Berkshire Hospital after the stabbings has been discharged.
Another remains in a stable condition under observation, a spokesperson told the PA.
“I’m appalled and sickened that people should lose their lives in this way and our thoughts are very much with the family and the friends of the victims today,” the prime minister said in a Downing Street interview.
“I’ve obviously talked to the chief constable at Thames Valley Police, thanked him and his officers for their bravery in tackling the suspect.
“We now have someone in custody. The police must get on with their job, get to the bottom of exactly what happened, and so it would be difficult really to comment in detail.
“Except to say this, if there are lessons we need to learn about how we handle such cases, how we handle the events leading up to such cases, then we will learn those lessons and we will not hesitate to take action where necessary.”
The suspect arrested over a terror attack that left three victims dead in Reading is a Libyan national called Khairi Saadallah, The Independent understands.
Saadallah, 25, has been arrested on suspicion of murder and remains in custody being questioned over the incident, our home affairs correspondent Lizzie Dearden reports.
Police are understood to be investigating mental health issues in connection with the attack.
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