Melbourne Terror Attack: Man Shot Dead After Fire and Fatal Stabbing

Tom Ozimek
By Tom Ozimek
November 9, 2018Australia
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An attacker who stabbed a man to death in Melbourne, Australia, has died after being shot by police in what authorities are calling a terrorist attack.

Police have identified the attacker as 31-year-old Mohamed Khalid. Born in Somali and from Melbourne’s northwestern suburbs.

The knifeman was shot as he tried to stab two officers on a central Melbourne street after he had stabbed three people on Friday, Nov. 9, according to Australia’s Perth Now. He died at Royal Melbourne Hospital on the same night.

Knife Attack

Police initially responded to reports of a vehicle on fire.

Victorian police chief commissioner Graham Ashton told a press conference that the suspect drove a pickup truck to a location on a busy Melbourne street and set the vehicle on fire.

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A burnt out vehicle is seen in Bourke St. in Melbourne, Australia, on Nov. 9, 2018. (Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

“He got out of the vehicle, engaged with some members of the public at that location. Almost within a minute, Victorian Police officers were in attendance in an unmarked vehicle,” Ashton said.

“He assaulted one of the police offices through the vehicle window by punching him. At that time other police were starting to arrive. He at that time produced a knife and attempted to attack the police officers. One of the officers fired his firearm and shot the offender once in the chest.”

The attacker had “barbecue-style gas cylinders” inside the car and set it alight, according to The Guardian.

The unnamed terror suspect was transported to Royal Melbourne Hospital, where he later died.

“We are treating this as a terrorism incident,” Ashton said, and added that the attacker’s identity is not being released due to the ongoing investigation.

The police chief said the suspect came to Australia from Somalia in the 1990s and was known to police.

He had a minor offending history of drug, theft, and driving offenses, according to the report.

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Premier Daniel Andrews speaks to the media as police chief Graham Ashton listens in Melbourne, Australia, on Nov. 9, 2018. (Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Witnesses said the attacker stabbed the victim, believed to be aged in his 60s, in the face.

“Three people have been stabbed. Unfortunately, one is deceased at the scene, two other victims are currently in hospital,” police Superintendent David Clayton told reporters at the scene, according to Perth Now.

A white sheet covered the victim as he lay on Bourke Street.

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Police examine a body in Bourke St. in Melbourne, Australia, on Nov. 9, 2018. (Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

One witness said the man was stabbed in the face and desperate efforts were made to save him.

“Because he was on his stomach, they turned him over to see if he’s alright, he was still alive,” nearby KFC worker Markel Villasin told AAP.

“He was breathing and he was bleeding out.”

Footage from the scene shows a man earlier swinging a knife at two uniformed officers near a burning car before he was shot.

“[Officers] were confronted by a male brandishing a knife and threatening them,” Clayton said.

Villasin said bystanders were screaming at police to shoot the knifeman.

“They were around him trying to take the knife out of his hand—I’m pretty sure it was a kitchen knife,” he said, according to Perth Now.

Police have said they believe the attacker acted alone and they are not searching for other suspects.

The prime minister, Scott Morrison, released a statement: “I condemn the act of terrorism in Melbourne today that has tragically taken the life of a fellow Australian who has died as a result of this evil and cowardly attack.”

“The attack is being treated as a terrorism incident,” Morrison said.

Victorian premier Daniel Andrews’ office sent out a statement following his press conference.

“Today, an act of terror struck the heart of our city, in a place where past wounds have still not healed,” the statement reads, according to The Guardian.

“To all of our first responders, we extend our utmost gratitude. And to the victims and their loved ones, we offer our prayers, support, and deepest sympathies.

“We won’t be defined by this evil act.”

From The Epoch Times

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