Priti Patel has ordered an immediate review of MPs’ security. A spokesman said: “The home secretary has asked all police forces to review security arrangements for MPs with immediate effect and will provide updates in due course.”
The killing of
the Conservative MP David Amess, who died after being stabbed several times at
an open advice surgery for his constituents in Essex, has been declared as a
terrorist incident.
The death of
the 69-year-old veteran backbencher brought heartfelt tributes from all
parties. Just five years after the murder of Jo Cox, it also prompted renewed
worries about the security risks for MPs in an increasingly rancorous and
polarised political era.
A 25-year-old
man, believed to be a Briton with Somali heritage, is in custody and has been
arrested on suspicion of murder. Sources have told the Guardian he has the same
details as someone who had previously been referred to the Prevent scheme, the
official programme for those thought at risk of radicalisation.
In a statement,
the Metropolitan police said the senior national coordinator for
counter-terrorism policing, Deputy Assistant Commissioner Dean Haydon, had
formally declared the incident as terrorism. The early investigation has
revealed “a potential motivation linked to Islamist extremism”, the force said.
As part of the
investigation, officers are searching two addresses in the London area, the Met
said. The force believes the man acted alone and are not seeking anyone else at
the moment.
Essex police
had briefed counter-terrorism policing headquarters about details of the attack
and suspect throughout Friday afternoon. MI5, the domestic Security Service,
was also monitoring the investigation.
Amess, who had
represented Southend West since 1997, and had previously been the MP for the
nearby Essex seat of Basildon from 1983, was stabbed several times at the
constituency event at a church in Leigh-on-Sea late on Friday morning.
Paramedics
treated Amess at the scene but were unable to save his life.
In a statement
to the media outside Southend police station, the chief constable of Essex,
Ben-Julian Harrington, said police and paramedics arrived at the scene “within
minutes” of being called.
“When they
arrived, they found Sir David Amess MP, who had suffered multiple injuries.
This was a difficult incident, but our officers and paramedics worked extremely
hard to save Sir David. Tragically, he died at the scene.”
News of the
attack prompted shock and revulsion both in the constituency, where Amess was a
well-known and visible figure, and from other MPs, faith leaders and others.
Flags were flown at half-mast at Downing Street and parliament.
The Commons
Speaker, Lindsay Hoyle, said the killing would “send shock waves across the
parliamentary community and the whole country”, adding: “In the coming days we
will need to discuss and examine MPs’ security and any measures to be taken.”
John Lamb,
Conservative councillor for the neighbouring ward of West Leigh and a former
leader of the council, said Amess would hold his advice surgeries in a range of
locations because “he wanted to come out and about and meet people”.
Lamb said he
had learned of the attack from a party colleague, who had been in touch with
people who were with Amess at the church. “They phoned her up to say: ‘David’s
been stabbed several times,’” Lamb said. “I came straight over.”
Kevin Buck, the
councillor for Prittlewell ward and a friend of Amess, said the MP’s assistant
and PA were both with him when he was attacked, adding: “I would imagine they
are traumatised, because they would have seen the whole thing.”
Related: After
two killings in five years, we must get serious about MPs’ security | Chris
Bryant.
As news of the
attack emerged, there were desperate hopes that the MP’s life could be saved,
with an air ambulance sent to the scene. But just over two hours later, police
released an updated statement saying the man attacked had died, subsequently
confirming this was Amess.
Tributes
flooded in from MPs across the political spectrum, many of them highlighting
Amess’s 38-year career in the Commons, one spent entirely on the backbenches,
as a champion of causes including animal rights and better treatment for
endometriosis.
In a brief TV
interview, Boris Johnson said he was “deeply shocked and heart-stricken” at the
news. The prime minister said: “Above all, he was one of the kindest, nicest
and most gentle people in politics. And he also had an outstanding record of
passing laws to help the most vulnerable.
“We’ve lost
today a fine public servant, and a much-loved friend and colleague, and our
thoughts are very much today with his wife, his children and his family.”
Keir Starmer,
the Labour leader, called it “a dark and shocking day”, adding: “The whole
country will feel it acutely, perhaps the more so because we have,
heartbreakingly, been here before.”
It was in 2016,
shortly before the Brexit referendum, when Cox, a Labour MP, was killed shortly
before holding a surgery in her constituency, raising worries about the safety
of MPs and the extent of threats and other intimidation many receive on a
routine basis.
Brendan Cox, her
widower, tweeted: “Attacking our elected representatives is an attack on
democracy itself. There is no excuse, no justification. It is as cowardly as it
gets.”
Kim Leadbeater,
Cox’s sister, who was elected as an MP for the same seat of Batley and Spen in
West Yorkshire in July, said the news had left her “scared and frightened”. She
said: “My phone started going straight away, my mum and dad, my partner, my
friends – ‘Are you OK?’ – and I was OK, I was visiting a school. But the shock
and the feelings for us as a family, obviously what we went through and another
family are going through that again, it’s horrific.”
In 2010,
another Labour MP, Stephen Timms, was stabbed twice at a constituency surgery
by a student radicalised by online videos. In 2000, Andrew Pennington, an
assistant to the Liberal Democrat MP Nigel Jones, was stabbed to death as he
tried to protect Jones from an attacker who stormed his constituency office
armed with a sword.
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