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At least two people were killed and several others injured in a mass stabbing attack that took place near a synagogue in UK’s Manchester city on Thursday, the local police authorities had reported.
Manchester synagogue (Photo Credits: IANS)
UK police said an attack on a Manchester synagogue that left two people dead is being treated as a terrorist incident.
At least two people were killed and several others injured in a mass stabbing attack that took place near a synagogue in UK’s Manchester city on Thursday, the local police authorities had reported.
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Police had said responding police officers shot dead a third person who was a “man believed to be the offender”. In a statement, police had said that the suspect’s death “cannot currently be confirmed due to safety issues surround suspicious items on his person.” The bomb disposal unit has reached the site of the incident, ABC News had reported.
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The local authorities had confirmed that at least three more people were injured and “remain in a serious condition.” The incident had taken place outside the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue in Manchester on Thursday, according to law enforcement.
According to police, injuries were caused by vehicle and stab wounds. Police had said that a member of the public told responding officers that he had seen a car being driven towards a crowd of the people. Police had said firearms officers responded to the call.
Terming it as a major incident, the police had given it a “PLATO” designation, a law enforcement shorthand implying that incident was being treated as a potential marauding terrorist attack, the ABC News reported. The incident had happened on Yom Kippur, regarded as the holiest day of the year in Jewish calendar.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer had said that he is “appalled” by the attack and announced that he will chair a COBRA (government emergency committee) meeting after he returns to London.
Starmer had said that the incident happening on Yom Kippur “makes it all the more horrific.” He had expressed sympathies with the loved ones of those affected and expressed gratitude to the emergency services and the first responders.
“I’m appalled by the attack at a synagogue in Crumpsall. The fact that this has taken place on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar, makes it all the more horrific. My thoughts are with the loved ones of all those affected, and my thanks go to the emergency services and all the first responders,” Starmer had posted on X.
Speaking to reporters before returning to the UK, Starmer had said, “The attack in Manchester this morning is absolutely shocking, and all of our thoughts are with those affected. I am on my way back to London. When I arrive, I will chair an emergency Cobra meeting. I’m already able to say that additional police assets are being deployed to synagogues across the country, and we will do everything to keep our Jewish community safe.”
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