An 11-year-old girl and a 34-year-old woman have been stabbed in Leicester Square, in London‘s famous West End. Police in the Sadiq Khan-governed capital have arrested a suspect described only as “a man.” They do not believe there are any “outstanding suspects” and claim “there is [currently] no suggestion that the incident is terror-related.”
Police say the 11-year-old girl will “require hospital treatment,” although her injuries are described as non-life-threatening. The 34-year-old reportedly “suffered more minor injuries.”
The attack comes as anti-mass migration protests grip the country following the deadly mass stabbing of several young girls in the seaside town of Southport, which the authorities are also declining to describe as terrorism.
Significant police resources are being poured into pacifying the protests—although Muslim and far-left counter-protests equally prone to violence are receiving a much more hands-off response—but also into more questionable activities such as hunting down and arresting social media users for posts inciting violence, “hatred,” and in at least one case “inaccurate information.”
“The offense of incitement to racial hatred involves publishing or distributing material which is insulting or abusive, which is intended to or likely to stir up racial hatred,” said the Director of Public Prosecutions of England and Wales—a position previously held by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer—last week.
“And we do have dedicated police officers who are scouring social media. Their job is to look for this material and then follow up with identification, arrests, and so forth,” he added, threatening that people could be arrested even for retweets and that the British state could seek to extradite problematic posters overseas.
Update: The 11-year-old girl will require hospital treatment but her injuries are not life threatening. The second victim suffered more minor injuries.
At this stage, there is no suggestion that the incident is terror-related.
— Westminster Police | Central West BCU (@MPSWestminster) August 12, 2024
This story is developing…