19 hurt as car ploughs into crowd in Melbourne
MELBOURNE: A car ploughed into a crowd in Australia’s second-largest city on Thursday injuring 19 people in what police said was a “deliberate act” but one they did not believe was terror related.
Witnesses said people were thrown through the air after being hit by the vehicle, which did not appear to be trying to stop as it “mowed everybody down” at a busy intersection in downtown Melbourne.
Victoria state police said the 32-year-old driver, an Australian of Afghan descent, was known to authorities for traffic and “minor assault” offences and had mental health issues.
The car was driven “intentionally” through the intersection and collided with a “large number” of pedestrians, Acting Chief Commissioner Shane Patton told reporters in Melbourne.
The driver “has a history of drug use and mental health issues... At this time we do not have any evidence or intelligence to indicate a connection with terrorism” or extremism, he said. The man was arrested after a tussle with an off-duty police officer.
Investigators were waiting to interview the driver, who was in hospital under police guard.
Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews called the incident an “evil, deliberate, cowardly act” that left 19 people hurt — four of them critically.
In a tweet, police appealed to members of the public to upload any images they might have of the incident to help assist with their investigation.
A witness, named only as Sue, told Melbourne radio station 3AW that she heard screams and saw “people flying everywhere”.
“We could hear this noise, as we looked left, we saw this white car, it just mowed everybody down,” she said.
“People are flying everywhere. We heard thump, thump. People are running everywhere.” Another witness, John, told ABC Radio Melbourne that he saw an “SUV coming at high speed”.
“(I) really just heard the collision with people with bags and what must be shopping trolleys — and I hope not prams,” he said.
“I’ve really never seen anything like this before and I haven’t stopped shaking.” The intersection is one of Melbourne’s busiest, a local shop owner told national broadcaster ABC, and is particularly crowded at this time of the year ahead of the Christmas break, with school holidays under way.
Among the injured were three South Korean tourists — two adults who are in intensive care with serious injuries to the lungs and pelvis, and a boy being treated for a leg fracture — Yonhap news agency said, citing Seoul’s foreign ministry.
Published in Dawn, December 22nd, 2017