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Man killed in London mosque attack ‘Bangladeshi expat’

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Published: 16:16, 19 June 2017   Update: 15:18, 26 July 2020
Man killed in London mosque attack ‘Bangladeshi expat’

International Desk: A van ploughed into pedestrians near a London mosque on early Monday, killing one man and injuring eight other people in what Prime Minister Theresa May said was ‘a potential terrorist attack’.

Sultan Ahmed, 34, whose uncle witnessed the attack said the driver shouted: ‘Kill all Muslims’ as he ploughed into the crowd of worshippers, reported telegraph.co.uk quoting Crime Correspondent Martin Evans.

He said the victim was an elderly Bangladeshi man who had just left the Muslim Welfare Mosque on Seven Sisters Road.

Ahmed, a charity worker, said, ‘My uncle had just left the mosque when an elderly man who was in front of him fell ill and collapsed on the ground.

‘A group of worshippers were crowding round to help him when the van drove at them and ran over the old man. There were at least two others who looked to be in a very bad way.

‘My uncle said the driver had shouted ‘I want to kill all Muslims’. There were also reports that the van had been parked over the road waiting for people to leave the mosque.’

However, Nadeem Qadir, Press Minister at the Bangladesh High Commission in London said the High Commission is in touch with the Metropolitan Police and the British-Bangladeshi Community to confirm whether the man killed in the terror attack in front of the mosque is originally from Bangladesh or not.

‘We'll update you as soon as we have the details,’ he added.

The 48-year-old driver of the van was detained by the public and then arrested by police.

Muslim leaders said worshippers were specifically targeted as they left after prayers near Finsbury Park mosque in north London shortly after midnight and linked the incident to a recent rise in anti-Muslim hate crime.

Witness Abdiqadir Warra told AFP the van ‘drove at people’ and some of the victims were carried for several metres along the road.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said it was a ‘horrific terrorist attack,’ calling it ‘deliberate’ and aimed at ‘innocent Londoners, many of whom were finishing prayers during the holy month of Ramzan’.

May was due to hold an emergency ministerial meeting later on Monday to discuss the attack.

It comes after two deadly Islamist attacks this year that used vehicles to ram pedestrians -- one earlier this month in the London Bridge area and a March attack in which a man drove a car into crowds on Westminster Bridge.

One witness, Abdul Rahman, told the BBC he saw the van ‘deliberately run over about 10 or 15 people’. Rahman said he and another man wrestled the suspect to the ground and held him down for 20 to 30 minutes before police arrived.

A police statement said ‘One man was pronounced dead at the scene... Eight people injured were taken to three separate hospitals.’

Two other people were treated at the scene for light injuries. Police said the male driver had also been taken to hospital as a precaution and would receive a mental health assessment.

Amateur video footage seen by AFP showed at least three people lying on the ground, including one who was receiving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.

‘Due to the nature of this incident, extra policing resources have been deployed in order to reassure communities, especially those observing Ramzan,’ the police statement said.

The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), an umbrella body for British Muslims, said the incident occurred outside the Muslim Welfare House on Seven Sisters Road, near the Finsbury Park mosque.

‘Over the past weeks and months, Muslims have endured many incidents of Islamophobia and this is the most violent manifestation to date,’ MCB head Harun Khan said.

AFP reporters saw a helicopter hovering overhead and several emergency vehicles blocking a section of Seven Sisters Road, a busy thoroughfare.

Police, including armed officers, could be seen manning a wide cordon around the area. Others searched the area with sniffer dogs.

A group of Muslim men were praying on the pavement nearby. Traffic was shut down along a one-kilometre section of the road.

Finsbury Park mosque was once a notorious hub for radical Islamists but has entirely changed in recent years under new management.

Its former imam Abu Hamza was jailed for life in New York on terrorism charges in 2015.

He preached there from 1997 to 2003 before being jailed for inciting violence. He was later extradited to the United States.

In 2015, the mosque was one of around 20 that took part in an open day organised by the MCB to promote better understanding of Islam following Islamist-inspired terrorist attacks in Paris.

Despite the change in leadership and a new focus on inter-faith relations, the mosque reported it had received a string of threatening emails and letters in the wake of the terror attacks in Paris.

Monday’s incident in London follows an Islamist-inspired attack on June 3 in which three militants wearing fake suicide vests ran over pedestrians and went on a stabbing spree in bars in the London Bridge area.

They killed eight people before being shot dead by police.

London Mayor Khan said following that attack that there had been a 40-percent increase in racist incidents in the city and a fivefold increase in the number of anti-Muslim incidents.

On his Facebook page, Khan at the time called on Londoners ‘to pull together, and send a clear message around the world that our city will never be divided by these hideous individuals who seek to harm us and destroy our way of life’.

Agencies

risingbd/DHAKA/June 19, 2017/Amirul

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