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Man found guilty over car attack outside UK parliament

July 17, 2019
Police officers cordon off Westminster Bridge, leading to Parliament Square in central London, after a car was driven into barriers at the Houses of Parliament, in this Aug. 14, 2018 file photo. — AFP
Police officers cordon off Westminster Bridge, leading to Parliament Square in central London, after a car was driven into barriers at the Houses of Parliament, in this Aug. 14, 2018 file photo. — AFP

LONDON — A London jury on Wednesday convicted a man of attempted murder after he tried to mow down cyclists, pedestrians and police with his car outside the British parliament last year, in an attack prosecutors said had a terrorist motive.

Jurors at the Old Bailey, England's central criminal court, agreed with the prosecution that Salih Khater, 30, had made "a deliberate attempt to kill and maim as many people as possible" when he steered the vehicle at his targets outside the Houses of Parliament last August.

Although the Sudanese-born British national did not kill anyone, ending up crashing the car into security barriers, the Aug. 14 attack sent several people to hospital for treatment.

The counterterrorism division at England's Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said it was reasonable to assume he had a terrorist motive.

It noted that he chose "an iconic site of national importance which had been subjected to terrorist attacks in the recent past".

Jenny Hopkins, from the CPS, said: "Whatever his motives, this was not an accident. It was a deliberate attempt to kill and maim as many people as possible."

The court heard that Khater — who was born in Sudan and granted asylum in Britain in 2010 — drove around Parliament Square several times before veering off at speed to strike a jogger.

He then ploughed through a group of 14 cyclists before accelerating towards two uniformed police officers standing by a security barrier outside parliament, who leapt away to avoid being hit by the vehicle.

The jogger was left lying on the ground with abrasions and heavy bruising, while six of the cyclists received injuries including a broken collar bone and bruising.

Khater claimed during the trial that the incident was an accident.

But an accident investigator who analyzed security camera footage of the incident concluded that Khater had deliberately maneuvered his car in the moments leading up to the attack "with a high level of concentration", according to the CPS.

"His driving was so precise and determined that it was difficult for skilled accident investigators to repeat the maneuver he carried out," Hopkins said.

She added it was "only quick reactions and good luck that stopped Salih Khater killing anyone".

It emerged that the resident of Birmingham in central England had unsuccessfully applied for a fast-track British passport the previous day, before driving straight to London.

Metropolitan Police counter-terrorism commander Clarke Jarrett said the investigation found that Khater, who repeatedly refused to answer officers' questions, had "acted completely alone" in perpetrating the attack.

"Khater remained silent throughout our investigation and only at his trial offered the implausible explanation that it was an accident," he added. "However, the evidence showed otherwise."

Khater will be sentenced in October, when the judge will also consider whether the offenses were committed with a terrorist connection.

He could face life in prison for the two counts of attempted murder. — AFP


July 17, 2019
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