Speaking at a
briefing in London, the Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley revealed the number
of terrorism-related arrests hit record levels last year.
There were
339 arrests in England, Wales and Scotland - the highest yearly figure.
A number of
attacks, including last year's gun and bomb attacks in Paris, are believed to
be inspired by IS.
Mark Rowley
said there was evidence IS - also known as Daesh - was "trying to build
bigger attacks" globally, including in the UK.
He said a
large-scale attack was the "natural next step" for IS.
Scotland Yard
- which published the data - said there had been a 57% in the last three years
compared with the previous three.
Although he
would not be drawn on specific plans or operations, Mr Rowley said IS had
expanded its ambitions from smaller-scale targets - often military personnel or
police.
"In
recent months we've seen a broadening of that. Much more plans to attack
Western lifestyle, and obviously the Paris attacks in November.
"Going
from that narrow focus on police and military as symbols of the state to
something much broader," he said.
"And you
see a terrorist group which has big ambitions for enormous and spectacular
attacks - not just the types that we've seen foiled to date."
Mr Rowley
said psychologists were being deployed to work with counter-terrorism units
because of increasing concern that people with mental health problems were
being radicalised.
BBC
May God protect us
ReplyDeleteThey will never succeed. AMEN
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