Car ploughs into Xmas shoppers in Melbourne

19 hurt in incident involving driver with history of mental health issues; no terror link, say cops

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An Australian man of Afghan descent with a history of mental health issues drove a car into Christmas shoppers in the city of Melbourne on Thursday, injuring 19 people, but police said they did not believe the attack was terror-related.
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A car plows into pedestrians at a crowded intersection in the Australian city of Melbourne, injuring up to 15 people, police say, adding they had arrested the driver and a second man.
Paramedics tending to those wounded in yesterday's car attack in Melbourne, which took place at a busy intersection on Flinders and Elizabeth streets - an area popular with tourists. Four of the 19 people injured were in critical condition, including a boy of pre-school age. PHOTO: WOSAURUS/ TWITTER

MELBOURNE • An Australian man with a history of mental health issues drove a car into Christmas shoppers in Melbourne yesterday, injuring 19 people, but police said they did not believe the attack was terror-related.

The incident took place at a busy intersection on Flinders and Elizabeth streets - an area popular with tourists - in the Central Business District of Australia's second-biggest city, media reports said.

Agence France-Presse news agency cited witnesses as saying that people were thrown into the air after being hit by the car, which did not appear to be trying to stop as it "mowed everybody down" .

Police said yesterday that they detained the 32-year-old driver, an Australian of Afghan descent with a history of assault, drug use and mental health issues.

"At this time, we don't have any evidence or intelligence to indicate a connection with terrorism," the acting chief commissioner of Victoria State, Mr Shane Patton, was quoted as saying by Reuters. He said the car was driven "intentionally" through the intersection.

Four of the injured were in critical condition, including a boy of pre-school age who had a head injury.

Police also detained a 24-year-old man at the scene who was filming the incident and had a bag with knives. Mr Patton said it was "quite probable" the 24-year-old was not involved. The men had not been charged and their names have not been released by police.

Investigators were waiting to interview the driver, who was in hospital under police guard.

Mr Jim Stoupas, owner of a doughnut shop at the scene of the incident, told Reuters the vehicle - believed to be a white Suzuki SUV - was travelling up to 100kmh when it drove into the intersection packed with people, hitting one person after another. "All you could hear was just 'bang bang bang bang bang' and screams," he said, adding that the car came to rest by a tram stop.

The incident followed another in January, in which four people were killed and more than 20 injured when a man drove into pedestrians just a few hundred metres away from yesterday's attack. That too was not a terror attack.

Melbourne has already installed about 140 concrete bollards in the city centre to stop vehicle attacks by militants similar to recent attacks in Europe and the United States. Sydney, Australia's biggest city, has also installed concrete barricades in main pedestrian thoroughfares.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and the emergency and health workers who are treating them," Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said on Twitter.

Victoria state's Premier Daniel Andrews called the incident an "evil, deliberate, cowardly act".

"What has occurred on Flinders Street was an act of evil and act of cowardice at a time of year when people should be out celebrating and doing their Christmas shopping," he was quoted as saying by the Sydney Morning Herald.

He offered praise for an off-duty police officer who helped detain the driver as well as the emergency services and police who, he said, arrived on the scene within seconds. The off-duty policeman was later taken to hospital.

"(The off-duty officer) deserves special praise for the way in which he instinctively came to the rescue of others, avoiding so much further carnage," Mr Andrews said.

Australia has been on a "high" national threat level since 2015, citing the likelihood of attacks by Australians radicalised in Iraq and Syria. Two hostages were killed in a siege by a "lone wolf" gunman, inspired by Islamic State in Iraq and Syria militants, in a cafe in Sydney in December 2014.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 22, 2017, with the headline Car ploughs into Xmas shoppers in Melbourne. Subscribe