advertisement
According to London Metropolitan Police, at least 11 people were injured on Saturday, after a car ploughed into pedestrians outside London's Natural History Museum, adding that it was not an act of terrorism.
One person was arrested after the road traffic collision outside the museum, Xinhua news agency quoted the police as saying.
One video on social media, amongst the many that were put put by pedestrians and museum-goers showed a man being restrained on the ground in the middle of Exhibition Road. None of the four people around him were in police uniform. A black Toyota car is seen behind them with the driver's door open.
British emergency services raced to London's Natural History Museum after a car struck pedestrians outside the building, on Saturday, 7 October. Police said a number of people were injured and one person was detained at the scene.
The crash happened at 2.20 pm on a day when the central London museum is usually teeming with pedestrians, including international tourists.
Photographs showed a dented silver car and a man being pinned to the ground outside the museum.
The London Ambulance Service was tending to the injured. There was no immediate statement on the number or severity of the injuries.
Shopkeepers in the immediate area were told to evacuate, and police established a large security cordon around the area minutes after the incident, closing some roads. Police helicopters circled the scene overhead.
The Natural History Museum tweeted that there had been a "serious incident" outside the museum, which is located near the world famous Victoria and Albert Museum and other attractions.
Downing Street said British Prime Minister Theresa May was being briefed on the incident.
London police said they were keeping an open mind about whether the incident was terrorism-related, contradicting an earlier comment that they were not treating the incident as terrorism-related.
A spokeswoman for the London force said counter-terrorism officers were assessing the incident but had not yet reached a conclusion as to the circumstances. Earlier, a spokesman told Reuters it was not being treated as a terrorism-related incident at this stage.
(With inputs from AP, Reuters)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)