Police detain man after 11 injured in car incident near London museum, terrorism ruled out

Updated 07 October 2017
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Police detain man after 11 injured in car incident near London museum, terrorism ruled out

LONDON: A man was detained after 11 people were injured on Saturday in a collision with a car near London’s Natural History Museum, in one of the capital’s busiest tourist areas, but police ruled out terrorism.
Police said it was believed a car mounted the pavement and collided with a number of pedestrians.
“The incident is a road traffic investigation and not a terrorist-related incident,” the statement said.
The museum, one of the most popular visitor attractions in the country, said in a statement: “A vehicle has collided with pedestrians near the Natural History Museum entrance at Exhibition Road.”
London’s ambulance service said they had treated 11 people, mostly for head and leg injuries, with nine taken to hospital.
Unverified footage from the scene in South Kensington, west London, showed a man being pinned to the ground by what appeared to be four security guards or police officers.
Prime Minister Theresa May was being updated, a spokesman said, adding it was usual practice in such circumstances, and London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he was in close contact with the police’s most senior counter-terrorism officer.
 




Footage of man being arrested after car hits pedestrians outside Natural History Museum in London. (Photo courtesy: social media)

Packed with tourists
Exhibition Road, in one of London’s most upmarket districts, is home to a host of museums, restaurants as well as university buildings with the streets packed with tourists at the weekend.
“We heard a horrible thudding noise and a car engine. Everyone started running and screaming inside,” Connor Honeyman, who was in the queue for the museum, told the BBC.
A Reuters witness said large numbers of paramedics and police, including armed officers, were at the scene although the atmosphere appeared calm.
The car believed to have been involved in the incident was lying diagonally across the road, jammed between two other vehicles. A BBC reporter said she had seen one or two people on the ground and police had told her the injuries sustained were minor.
Britain is on its second highest security alert level, meaning an attack by militants is considered highly likely. There have been five attacks described by the authorities as terrorism this year, three involving vehicles.
In March, a man drove a car into pedestrians on London’s Westminster Bridge killing four before stabbing a police officer to death in the grounds of parliament.
Three Islamist militants drove into people on London Bridge in June before stabbing people at nearby restaurants and bars, killing eight. The same month, a van was driven into worshippers near a mosque in north London which left one man dead.
The Natural History Museum is the fourth most popular tourist attraction in the United Kingdom, with 4.6 million visits during 2016, according to the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions.
A spokesman for the museum told Reuters that no one was being allowed into the building and people were being let out through a different exit. 


Indonesia deports American after 11 years in Bali ‘suitcase murder’ case

Updated 3 sec ago
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Indonesia deports American after 11 years in Bali ‘suitcase murder’ case

JAKARTA: Indonesia freed and deported an American man Tuesday after he spent 11 years in prison for the premeditated murder of his then-girlfriend’s mother on the tourist island of Bali.
Tommy Schaefer was sentenced to 18 years in prison for the 2014 murder of Sheila von Wiese-Mack, the mother of Heather Mack, during a luxury vacation in a case also known as the Bali “suitcase murder.”
Schafer was deported back to the United States from Bali International Airport on Tuesday evening after serving his sentence and receiving a number of remissions for good behavior, said Felucia Sengky Ratna, head of the Bali Regional Office of the Directorate General of Immigration, in a statement.
The badly battered body of the 62-year-old von Wiese-Mack, a wealthy Chicago socialite, was found inside the trunk of a taxi parked at the upscale St. Regis Bali Resort in August 2014.
Heather Mack, who was almost 19 and a few weeks pregnant at the time of the killing, and her then-21-year-old boyfriend, Schaefer, were arrested on the island a day after the body was found.
Mack served seven years of a 10-year prison sentence in Bali for helping to kill her mother and was deported in October 2021.
She was also sentenced to 26 years in prison in Chicago in January 2024, after she pleaded guilty to helping kill her mother and stuffing the body in a suitcase during their vacation.