London attack: Prime Minister says bridge attackers identified

Monday, June 5, 2017
London attack: Prime Minister says bridge attackers identified
Britain's prime minister says she supports police 'shoot to kill' policy used to stop London attackers

LONDON -- Prime Minister Theresa May says police have identified all the London Bridge attackers and that 11 people remain in custody for possible connections to the attack.

May said Monday the police and counter-terrorism operations are adequately funded and staffed and that the official threat level is to remain at "severe," meaning an attack in highly likely.

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Police sniffer dogs on London Bridge after an incident in central London, Saturday, June 3, 2017.
Dominic Lipinski/PA via AP

May added that Britain must do "more, much more" to fight Islamic extremism and combat "bigotry and hatred." She called it "an evil ideology" that perverts Islam and perverts the truth.

She said Britain will review its counter-terrorism strategy and consider extending prison terms.

Investigators searched two homes Monday and detained "a number" of people in the investigation into a van and knife attack in the heart of London that left seven people dead.

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Dozens were injured, many of them critically, in the attack that started on the London Bridge, when three attackers swerved the vehicle into pedestrians then, armed with knives, rampaged through Borough Market, slashing and stabbing anyone they could find.

The three men, who wore fake suicide vests, were shot to death by police. The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility.

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London's police chief has said the attackers have been identified, but the names haven't been released. At least 12 people were arrested Sunday, including five men and seven women ranging in age from 19 to 60. One person has been released without charge.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick said she wouldn't release further details in what she described as a fast-moving investigation, including whether authorities were familiar with the men before the attack.

IS has claimed responsibility for three attacks in Britain since March, and Dick described the recent wave of violence as "unprecedented in my working life."

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"We in this country have faced a terrorist threat throughout my life - it changed and morphed and we will change and adapt to what appears to be a new reality for us," she said.

Prime Minister Theresa May warned that the country faced a new threat from copycat attacks.

The country's major political parties temporarily suspended campaigning with only days to go before the general election. May said the vote would take place as scheduled Thursday because "violence can never be allowed to disrupt the democratic process."

Most of the London Underground stations reopened Monday in the neighborhood where the attack took place, allowing life to resume after more than 24 hours of lockdown. Some residents cooped up inside all day Sunday emerged from their homes for the first time since the attacks.

"We were all stuck!" said Marcia Rainford, a 58-year-old who said she was sealed into her building complex with her mother and two children.

"We got blocked in. One whole day," she said. Luckily she had a full fridge. "I always stock up!"

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