Scenes From the London Attack

An attack outside Parliament shocked central London on Wednesday afternoon as a chaotic burst of mayhem left at least four people dead — including an assailant and police officer — injured 20 and prompted the hasty evacuation of the prime minister.

An attack outside Parliament shocked central London on Wednesday afternoon as a chaotic burst of mayhem left at least four people dead — including an assailant and police officer — injured 20 and prompted the hasty evacuation of the prime minister.

The driver of a large vehicle mowed down pedestrians on Westminster Bridge, which leads to Parliament, killing two people and injuring others, before crashing into a railing. Some of the injured were teenage schoolchildren from France. Photographs — some of them graphic — show victims lying on the bridge and on the sidewalk outside the Parliament building.

Witnesses said a driver mowed down people Wednesday on Westminster Bridge, which spans the Thames. Credit Toby Melville/Reuters

By The New York Times. Source: Terrain and aerial imagery by Google

A woman tended to an injured person on Westminster Bridge on Wednesday. Credit Toby Melville/Reuters

On Westminster Bridge. The Metropolitan Police said officers were summoned to the area at about 2:40 p.m. Credit Toby Melville/Reuters

Police officers and emergency workers escorted the wounded. Credit Carl Court/Getty Images

Police officers surrounded a man on the ground outside the Palace of Westminster. Credit Stefan Rousseau/Press Association, via Associated Press.


London attack: What we know so far

Four people have died and 20 people have been injured after what police are treating as terrorist attacks in Westminster, earlier on Wednesday. Here is what we know so far.

Witnesses saw a car drive across Westminster Bridge and hit a number of pedestrians walking on the pavement.
These included three police officers who were walking across the bridge on their way back from a commendation ceremony.

Four university students from Edge Hill University, in Ormskirk, Lancashire, who were on a two-day educational trip to the Houses of Parliament, were also injured in the attack.

The university's vice chancellor, Dr John Cater, told BBC North West Tonight that two were sent to hospital as "walking wounded", whilst two others had minor injuries.

A group of French schoolchildren were also on the bridge and three were injured in the incident.

French Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve tweeted his support to the British as well as to "the French students wounded, their families and their schoolmates".

The car then crashed into railings outside the Houses of Parliament.

At 14.40 (GMT) the Metropolitan Police were called to an incident around Parliament Square in central London.
Reports made to the police included a person in the river, a car hitting pedestrians and a man armed with a knife.

Acting Deputy Commissioner for the Metropolitan Police Mark Rowley said two people had died after the incident on the bridge and 20 people had been injured.

London Ambulance Service said it had treated 12 people with serious injuries, who were all taken to hospital. They also treated eight people with less serious injuries at the scene.

Assistant medical director of King's College Hospital, Dr Chris Palin, said eight patients were being treated there - six men and two women. Two are critically injured and six are stable.

A spokesperson from Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust said they was treating two patients - a man and a woman - and both were in a stable condition.

Shortly after the incident on the bridge, a police officer was stabbed in the grounds of the Houses of Parliament. The attacker was then shot.

The BBC has been told that an MP gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for 15 minutes "but sadly the officer died".
Acting Deputy Commissioner Rowley confirmed the armed officer had died, as well as a man they believed to be the attacker.

He told a press conference he believed there to be only one attacker, but searches were ongoing.

Parliament has been suspended for the rest of the day and politicians, journalists and visitors to the buildings were locked in for about five hours.

Just after 17:00 GMT, a woman was pulled from the River Thames alive, but with injuries.

Commander BJ Harrington of the Metropolitan Police, the senior national co-ordinator at the Met, has declared the events as terrorist incidents.

Prime Minister Theresa May is to chair a meeting of the government's emergency Cobra committee later.

Both the House of Commons and the House of Lords will sit tomorrow at their normal times.

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