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UK parliament attack suspect appears in court, charged with attempted murder

August 20, 2018
A police van, believed to be carrying Sudanese-born British national Salih Khater, leaves Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London on Monday. — Reuters
A police van, believed to be carrying Sudanese-born British national Salih Khater, leaves Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London on Monday. — Reuters

LONDON — A terror suspect accused of crashing his car into the security barriers surrounding Britain’s Houses of Parliament appeared in court on Monday charged with attempted murder.

Sudanese-born British national Salih Khater is accused of driving into a group of cyclists and then police officers last Tuesday.

He appeared at Westminster Magistrates Court in London on Monday where judge Emma Arbuthnot, England’s chief magistrate, remanded him in custody following a seven-minute hearing.

The 29-year-old is charged with two counts of attempted murder of members of the public and of police officers. He did not enter a plea on Monday.

Khater will next appear for another short hearing at the Old Bailey in London, England’s central criminal court, on Aug. 31.

Wearing a gray t-shirt and white trousers, Khater confirmed his name, date of birth, nationality and home address in Birmingham, central England.

Prosecutor Samuel Main alleged that Khater “accelerated into a group of cyclists”, then, having driven through them, “veered off the open road, down a chute and towards police officers” guarding the parliament building.

The incident followed a “short but intensive period of reconnaissance”, he alleged.

Main said detectives had made extensive enquiries and had come up with “no evidence” of an accident, mechanical failure, a medical episode or disorder, intention to commit suicide or a crisis in Khater’s personal circumstances.

The prosecutor alleged it was a “deliberately calculated attack”.

Main said the choice of location and the attempt to kill police officers suggested “that the defendant intended to make a political statement”.

Prosecutors were therefore treating the case “as terrorism”, Main told Arbuthnot.

The location was close to that of another attack in March last year when Khalid Masood, a 52-year-old Briton, mowed down pedestrians, killing five people before fatally stabbing a police officer. — AFP


August 20, 2018
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