A British soldier was hacked to death by two men shouting Islamic
slogans in a south London street on Wednesday, in what the government
said appeared to be a terrorist attack.
A dramatic clip filmed by
an onlooker just minutes after the killing showed a man with hands
covered in blood, brandishing a bloodied meat cleaver and a knife.
“We
swear by almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you. The only
reason we have done this is because Muslims are dying every day,” the
black man in his 20s or 30s, wearing a wool jacket and jeans and
speaking with a local accent, shouted in the footage obtained by
Britain’s ITV news channel.
“This British soldier is an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.”
The
attack was the first apparent Islamist killing in London since suicide
bombers struck transport in July 2005. The capital was shocked by the
bizarre scene of a killer covered in gore, declaring his motive to
onlookers.
Police shot the two suspects while trying to arrest
them, and the wounded men were taken into custody. No information was
immediately released about the identity of the suspects, but two sources
familiar with the investigation told Reuters authorities were
investigating a possible link to Nigeria, as unconfirmed reports said
the two suspects are British citizens of Nigerian descent.
“I
apologize that women had to witness that, but in our lands our women
have to see the same thing. You people will never be safe. Remove your
government. They don’t care about you,” the videotaped man said before
crossing the street and speaking casually to the other attacker.
Prime Minister David Cameron cut short a visit to France to return to London and chair an emergency national security meeting.
“The
police are urgently seeking the full facts about this case but there
are strong indications that it is a terrorist incident,” Cameron said
before cutting short talks with French President Francois Hollande to
return home.
“We have had these sorts of attacks before in our country and we never buckle in the face of them,” he said.
The
attack happened on the edge of London’s sprawling Royal Artillery
Barracks in Woolwich, a south London working class district which has
long-standing historic links to the military.
In signs of a
backlash after the attack, more than 100 angry supporters of the English
Defense League, a far-right street protest group, took to the streets,
some wearing balaclavas and carrying England’s red and white flag. They
were contained by riot police.
Separately, two men were arrested in connection with separate attacks on mosques outside London. No one was hurt.
The
authorities did not immediately confirm the identity of the slain man,
but a source told Reuters the man may have been a member of the
military. The British government normally withholds the identities of
slain service members until their families are informed.
The
victim was wearing a T-shirt saying “Help for Heroes”, the name of a
charity formed to help wounded British veterans. Britain has had troops
deployed in Afghanistan since 2001 and had troops in Iraq from
2003-2009.
Before he was stabbed to death, the victim was knocked
over by a blue car which then rammed into a lamppost. The attackers
pounced on him in broad daylight in a busy residential street.
Witnesses said they shouted “God is greatest” in Arabic while stabbing the victim and trying to behead him.
“I
am afraid it is overwhelmingly likely now to be a terrorist attack, the
kind the city has seen before,” London mayor Boris Johnson said. Police
said in a statement late on Wednesday that the murder investigation was
led by the Counter Terrorism Command, a specialist branch within the
London force.
“We have lost a brave soldier,” Prime Minister David
Cameron said Thursday, adding: “The people who did this were trying to
divide us. They should know something like this will only bring us
together and make us stronger.”
Fred Oyat, a 44-year-old local
resident, said he witnessed the attack on the soldier from the window of
his high-rise apartment overlooking the scene.
“The victim was
white,” he told Reuters. “I was in my house when four shots rung out. I
went to the window I saw a man lying on the ground with a lot of blood.”
London
was last hit by a serious militant attack in July 2005, when four young
Islamists set off suicide bombs on the public transport network,
killing 52 people and wounding hundreds. A similar attempted attack 2
weeks later was thwarted.
British counter-terrorism chiefs have
recently warned that radicalized individuals, so-called “lone wolves”
who might have had no direct contact with al Qaeda, posed as great a
risk as those who plotted attacks on the lines of the 2005 bombings.
The
bombing attacks on the Boston Marathon last month, which U.S.
authorities blame on two brothers, have raised the profile of the “lone
wolf” threat in the West. A French-Algerian gunman killed three off-duty
French soldiers and four Jewish civilians on a rampage in southern
France last year.
Britain’s involvement in the wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq in the past decade has often stirred anger among British
Muslims and occasionally made soldiers a target at home. British police
have foiled at least two major plots in which Islamist suspects were
accused of planning to kill off-duty troops.
Ahmed Jama, a 26-year-old Woolwich resident, laid flowers down at the scene as a sign of respect to the families involved.
“This
has nothing to do with Islam, this has nothing to do with our religion.
This has nothing to do with Allah,” he said “It has nothing to do with
Islam. It’s heartbreaking, it’s heartbreaking.” [Reuters]
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