Theme

UK police arrest 2 men over arson attack on ambulances belonging to a Jewish charity

· English· AP News
UK police arrest 2 men over arson attack on ambulances belonging to a Jewish charity

View at burnt ambulances in a car park at Golders Green in London, Monday, March 23, 2026 after an apparent arson attack on four vehicles belonging to a Jewish ambulance service, Hatzola Northwest.(AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali) 2026-03-25T08:47:23Z LONDON (AP) — British police arrested two men on Wednesday in connection with an arson attack on four ambulances belonging to a Jewish charity, which authorities are investigating as an antisemitic hate crime.

The Metropolitan Police said the two men, aged 45 and 47, were arrested in London on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life and both men have been taken to a police station in the city for questioning.

Commander Helen Flanagan, head of Counter Terrorism Policing London, said the arrests marked “an important breakthrough in the investigation.” But she noted that surveillance camera footage of the incident suggests three people were involved.

Police have not declared the incident to be a terror attack, but are investigating a claim of responsibility by a group with potential links to Iran.

The blaze early on Monday morning in Golders Green, a London neighborhood with a large Jewish population, consumed four ambulances belonging to the volunteer organization Hatzola Northwest.

Oxygen cylinders on the vehicles exploded, breaking windows in an adjacent apartment block.

Also shattered was the community’s shaky sense of security , already strained by wars in the Middle East and what many say is soaring hatred of Jews.

The U.K. has accused Iran of using criminal proxies to conduct attacks on European soil targeting opposition media outlets and the Jewish community.

Britain’s MI5 domestic intelligence service says more than 20 “potentially lethal” Iran-backed plots were disrupted in the year to October.

Police are probing a claim of responsibility posted on social media by a group calling itself Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamia, which translates as the Islamic Movement of the Companions of the Right.

Israel’s government has described it as a recently founded group with suspected links to pro-Iran networks that has also claimed responsibility for synagogue attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands.

Metropolitan Police chief Mark Rowley said detectives are investigating the claim but it is too early to attribute the attack to the Iranian state.

JILL LAWLESS Lawless is based in London, covering British politics, diplomacy and culture and top stories from the UK and beyond.

She has reported for the AP f

原文链接: AP News

1 min · 394w
Home
Browse next
Keep exploring from this story
View this source View this language on the homepage Search related topics

More in this language

Minister caught in Malaysia’s ‘corporate mafia’ saga denies US$2.4 million bribe claim
南华早报 · 2026-03-25
Data science, AI slip as 53% of Hong Kong’s university subjects fall in QS rankings
南华早报 · 2026-03-25
Israel To Hold Zone Up To Lebanon's Litani River
Bloomberg · 2026-03-25
Open source isn't a tip jar – it's time to charge for access
The Register · 2026-03-25
Macbook Pro 16 M5 Max im Test: Der beste Laptop zum Gebrauchtwagenpreis
Golem · 2026-03-25

More from this source

Russia says it shot down almost 400 Ukrainian drones as Moscow and Kyiv escalate aerial barrages
English · 2026-03-25
TSA officers describe tears, tough choices and dwindling savings from working without pay
English · 2026-03-25
Perfect homework, blank stares: Why colleges are turning to oral exams to combat AI
English · 2026-03-25
Oil falls more than 4% and Asian shares gain over Trump’s talk of negotiations with Iran
English · 2026-03-25
Jewish communities boost security and continue observances amid rise in hateful incidents
English · 2026-03-25

Recently read