A van ran
into pedestrians near a north London mosque, killing one man and injuring eight
others in an incident that police on Monday said was being investigated by
counter-terrorism officers.
The
48-year-old driver of the van was detained by members of the public and then
arrested by police, as Muslim leaders said worshippers were specifically
targeted after leaving prayers at the mosque shortly after midnight.
The incident
comes after two deadly Islamist-inspired attacks this year that used vehicles
to ram pedestrians -- a stabbing spree 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
man was pronounced dead at the scene... Eight people injured were taken to
three separate hospitals," police said in a statement, adding that two
other people were treated for minor injuries.
Eyewitness
Abdiqadir Warra told AFP: "He just drove at people. Some of them he took a
few metres (along the road)."
David
Robinson, 41, who arrived just after the accident, said: "We saw lots of
people shouting and lots of people injured".
Amateur
video footage seen by AFP showed three people lying on the ground, including
one who was receiving mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
Police said
the driver had also been taken to hospital and would receive a mental health
assessment.
"Due to
the nature of this incident, extra policing resources have been deployed in order
to reassure communities, especially those observing Ramadan," the police
statement concluded.
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.
Harun Khan,
the head of the MCB, said the van had "intentionally" run over people
who were leaving prayers held during the holy month of Ramadan.
- 'Terrible
incident' -
Prime
Minister Theresa May condemned it as a "terrible incident", while
opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said he was "totally shocked"
and had been in touch with mosques and police.
The area is
in Corbyn's Islington North constituency.
A helicopter
hovered overhead and several emergency vehicles blocked a section of Seven
Sisters Road, a busy thoroughfare where the incident happened.
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.
'Evil
violence'
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
Paris attacks.
"If
this attack is confirmed as a deliberate terrorist attack then this should be
classed as an act of terrorism," said Mohammed Shafiq, head of the
Ramadhan Foundation community group.
"The
British Muslim community requires all decent people to stand with us against
this evil violence," he said, adding that "rampant Islamophobia has
been on the rise for a number of years".
Cage, a
Muslim human rights group, said there had been "an epidemic rise in
anti-Muslim hate crimes" but called for calm "not to inflame an
already volatile and distressing situation".
Spike in
anti-Muslim crime
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
Sadiq 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".
Britain has
seen two other attacks this year.
On March 22,
a man drove a rented car into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge in London and
stabbed a police officer guarding the British parliament to death before being
shot dead.
Five people
were killed in the attack.
On May 22, a
suicide bomber blew himself up outside a pop concert in Manchester, killing 22
people.
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