British police died fatally suspicious after 2 killed, 3 injured in attack near the synagogue
British police said on Thursday that two people were killed and three injured in an attack outside a synagogue in the north of Manchester, England.
The Grand Manchester police said they were called to the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation in Crumpsall shortly after 9:30 a.m. by a public member. The appellant said he had witnessed a car led to public members and that a man had been stabbed, police said.
Police said a few minutes later, shots were fired by police.
Grand Manchester police confirmed that the suspect had died after summoning a unit of the elimination of the bomb on the premises as a precaution.
Police said the injured were in serious condition without developing. The faithful inside the synagogue were not among the injured.
“We are grateful to the public member whose rapid response to what they have seen made it possible to allow our rapid action and, therefore, the offender was prevented from entering the synagogue,” said a police spokesman in a social media position.
Chava Lewin, who lives next to the synagogue, said that she had heard a blow and thought it could be a fireworks until her husband is courting their house and said there was an attack.
A witness told her that she had seen a car driving cracked irregularly in the doors of the worship.
“She thought he may have a heart attack,” said Lewin. “The second he got out of the car, he started stabbing anyone near him. He went to get the security guard and tried to enter the synagogue.”
The British government is organizing an emergency meeting
A video on social networks has shown that the police with firearms pointed out on a person lying on the ground under a blue star of David on the brick wall of the synagogue.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said that additional police are deployed in synagogues across the United Kingdom
Starmer, in Copenhagen for a summit, in an article on social networks, thanked the first stakeholders and said that his thoughts were with the victims and their loved ones.
“I am dismayed by the attack during a synagogue in Crumpsall,” said Starmer. “The fact that this took place on Yom Kippour, the most holy day of the Jewish calendar, makes it even more horrible.”

Starmer returned from the summit to chair a meeting of the government’s emergency committee, Cobra.
“These are all the rabbis or the worst jetty nightmare,” said Rabbi Jonathan Romain of Maidenhead Synagogue and chief of the Rabbinic Court of Great Britain. “Not only is it a sacred day, the most sacred in the Jewish calendar, but it is also a period of mass gathering, and the moment when the Jewish community, as religious or irreligious, is gathers.”
King Charles said that he and Queen Camilla were “deeply shocked and saddened” to learn the attack “by such an important day for the Jewish community.”
“Our thoughts and prayers are with all the people affected by this appalling incident and we greatly appreciate the rapid actions of the emergency services,” said Charles on his flow of social media.
Manchester was the site of the deadliest attack in Great Britain in recent years, the 2017 suicide bombing during an Ariana Grande concert which killed 22 people.
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