Brutal, fatal cleaver assault in London called a terrorist attack

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Brutal, fatal cleaver assault in London called a terrorist attack


By Laura Smith-Spark and Greg Botelho, CNN

updated 10:01 PM EDT, Wed May 22, 2013

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
A man thought to be a soldier is hit by a car then hacked to death, witnesses say
Video shows a man with a cleaver and swearing "by Allah" to keep fighting
A man who filmed one suspect says he "came straight to me" and started talking
"Despicable acts like this will not go unpunished," a UK minister says
London (CNN) -- They first hit the man, thought to be a British soldier, with a car in broad daylight. Then the two attackers hacked him to death and dumped his body in the middle of a southeastern London road.

As the victim -- dressed in what appeared to be a T-shirt for Help for Heroes, a charity that helps military veterans -- lay prone, one of the two attackers found a camera.

"We swear by almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you until you leave us alone," said a meat-cleaver-wielding man with bloody hands, speaking in what seems to be a London accent.





"The only reasons we killed this man ... is because Muslims are dying daily," he added, in video aired by CNN affiliate ITN. "This British soldier is an eye for an eye, a tooth for tooth."

One witness, Michael Atlee, described the gruesome, frenzied and ultimately fatal sequence of events Wednesday afternoon as "a bloody mess."

British Prime David Cameron called it a terrorist attack.

"We will never buckle to terror," Cameron wrote on Twitter.

Home Secretary Theresa May offered a similar assessment Wednesday night of the situation and a similar message of resolve


http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/22/world/europe/uk-london-attack/index.html
 
I am appalled at what happened in london by these terriosts

i hope they get the fullest punishment the uk officials can do
 
It was shocking watching this all unfold on the news after getting home from work :( Our city is a dangerous place at times (but any big city can be!). What also shocked me was the amount of knee jerk racist reactions that poured out of social media. A huge let down in my eyes :no: Now thinking about it I'm also saddened by the fact that some of the public's first reaction was to get out their phones and start filming. Especially filming that guy's rant. Why give them the platform that they obviously wanted? I live & work not too far from an army barracks which was decommissioned last year and we've had no troubles like what happened or any voilence.

My thoughts are with the victims family and friends :angel:
 
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Woolwich attack: interview with Ingrid Loyau-Kennett

Witness spoke to the two men who have since been arrested over the attack. She told Conal Urqhart her story

Woolwich-attack-suspect-o-010.jpg



"I was just on my way home after a trip to France. I was visiting my children in Plumstead and I had taken a 53 bus to get to Parliament Square where I was going to meet my children and walk to Victoria coach station before getting the coach to Helston in Cornwall.

"I was sitting on the lower deck and the bus stopped. I could clearly see a body in the road and a crashed car. I trained as a first aider when I was a Brownie leader, so I asked someone to watch my bag and then got off to see if I could help.
"I went over to the body where there was a lady sitting there and she said he was dead. She had comforted him by putting something under his back and a jacket over his head. I took his pulse and there was none. I couldn't see the man's face but I could see no evidence that suggested someone had tried to cut off his head. I could see nothing on him to suggest that he was a soldier.

"Then a black guy with a black hat and a revolver in one hand and a cleaver in the other came over. He was very excited and he told me not to get close to the body. I didn't really feel anything. I was not scared because he was not drunk, he was not on drugs. He was normal. I could speak to him and he wanted to speak and that's what we did.

"I spoke to him for more than five minutes. I asked him why he had done what he had done. He said he had killed the man because he [the victim] was a British soldier who killed Muslim women and children in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was furious about the British army being over there.

"There was blood on the pavement by the car where the man on the ground had been hit by it. At first there was no blood by the body but as I talked to the man it began to flow which worried me because blood needs a beating heart to flow. But I didn't want to annoy the man by going back to the body.

"I asked him what he was going to do next because the police were going to arrive soon. He said it was a war and if the police were coming, he was going to kill them. I asked him if that was a reasonable thing to do but it was clear that he really wanted to do that. He talked about war but he did not talk about dying and then he left to speak to someone else.
"I went to speak to the other man who was quieter and more shy. I asked him if he wanted to give me what he was holding in his hand, which was a knife but I didn't want to say that. He didn't agree and I asked him: 'Do you want to carry on?' He said: 'No, no, no.' I didn't want to upset him and then the other man came back to me. I asked him what he wanted to do next.

"At that point, there were so many people around that I didn't want him to get scared or agitated. I kept talking to him to keep him occupied.

"Then I saw my bus was moving and I knew that the police would arrive very soon. I asked him if there was anything else I could do for him because my bus was about to leave and he said no.

"I got on the bus and, after 10 seconds, someone came on and told everyone to get down. I saw a police car pulling up and a police man and policewoman getting out. The two black men ran towards the car and the officers shot them in the legs, I think.

"When the shooting started, I was not scared. There weres so many women screaming and crying on the bus, it took me a minute to calm them down. I didn't have a moment to think of myself.

"I could see the man with the black hat on was badly hurt as he was being operated on but both were still moving.
"The bus then started to move away. They dropped us in the middle of Lewisham which really annoyed me because I had no idea how to get from there to Parliament Square. "I am just happy that I managed to do something that might have prevented more trouble. I feel fine at the moment but I suppose the shock could hit me later."

Article here
 
It´s terrible

An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind.
Mahatma Gandhi
 
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