[caption id="attachment_119402" align="alignnone" width="560"]
Armed police descend an escalator at the foot of the Shard outside London Bridge station, Sunday June 4, 2017, near the scene of Saturday night's terrorist incident on London Bridge and at Borough Market. Several people were killed in the terror attack at the heart of London and dozens injured. Prime Minister Theresa May convened an emergency security cabinet session Sunday to deal with the crisis. [/caption]
London, June 4 (IANS): Suspected Islamists rammed a van into a group of unsuspecting pedestrians and tourists on the London Bridge and later launched knife attacks at nearby pubs, killing seven people and injuring 48. Police shot dead all three suspects.
Some of the wounded, including a police officer, were reportedly in critical condition. Police said 12 suspects have been arrested in connection with the terror attack.
The Saturday night mayhem in the heart of London came less than a fortnight after a young British suicide bomber detonated a powerful bomb in the Manchester Arena just when an American concert had ended, killing 22 people and injuring more than 100.
It all began when a white transit-style van speeding toward the London Bridge Tube station drove into people including foreigners enjoying a pleasant weather around 10 p.m., sending one man flying some 20 feet in the air.
In no time, four or five people were on the ground, dead or dying, witnesses told the media.
The vehicle continued to drive towards Borough Market, just south of the bridge, where three assailants got out and began stabbing civilians at a restaurant as well as police officers who tried to stop them, the BBC reported.
One attacker was seen with "a big knife" attacking people in the Borough Market whose pubs and restaurants were packed.
Armed officers who reached the scene within eight minutes after getting the first call gunned down the suspects, who wore fake bomb vests.
By then, however, the terrorists -- who like the dead have not been identified by name or nationality -- had done the damage.
One of them barged into a crowded pub and repeatedly stabbed a young woman.
An eyewitness, Gerard, told the BBC: "They were running up shouting 'This is for Allah'. They stabbed this girl maybe 10 times, 15 times."
Others in the pub fought off the terrorist with chairs and bottles, forcing him to exit.
Some of the wounded were in critical condition, including a French citizen. Among the foreigners attacked were two Australians, a New Zealander and his French girlfriend and some other French citizens.
The attack triggered panic in the tourist area. People fled the scene, in some places with their hands raised on police instructions. The ruling Conservative Party immediately suspended its nation-wide election campaign.
London Bridge Tube station and the London Bridge were closed from both directions. Authorities said additional police and officers would be deployed across London in the coming days.
Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley said: "We are treating this as a terrorist incident." A Traffic Police officer, an off-duty officer and two more officers were injured as they took on the terrorists before their armed colleagues arrived.
British Prime Minister Theresa May said: "It's time to say enough is enough." She said the counter-terrorism strategy would be reviewed, the election campaign would resume on Monday and the parliamentary elections would be held as planned on June 8.
This is the third terror attack in Britain since March.
On March 22, six people, including a lone attacker, were killed and at least 50 people were injured in a similar attack on Westminster Bridge near Parliament. Then came the Manchester horror.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he was "appalled and furious that these cowardly terrorists would deliberately target innocent Londoners", reports the Guardian.
President Donald Trump offered help to Britain and reiterated his call for a travel ban on citizens entering the US from select countries.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who returned home early on Sunday after a four-nation European tour, denounced the killings of the innocents and offered condolences to the victims.
British counter-terrorism police today arrested 12 suspects after a raid at a home of one of the London Bridge terror attackers in East London.
A spokesman of the British counter-terrorism police said the arrests were made following a raid on a block of flats in Barking. The home belonged to one of the suspects and was raided hours after the attack.
Controlled explosions were also carried out at the flat in Barking this morning, the BBC reported.
According to neighbours, the dead attacker had lived there for about three years and was married with two children. The spokesman said "searches of a number of addresses in Barking are continuing."
Three knife-wielding attackers wearing fake suicide vests unleashed a terror rampage in the British capital last night, plowing a van into pedestrians on the iconic London Bridge before stabbing revellers in nearby Borough market, killing seven people and injuring 48 others.
The three attackers were shot dead just eight minutes after police received a 999 call about the incident.
The attack was the third deadly terror attack in Britain in three months and came just days ahead of the UK general election to be held on June 8.