UK police have said two people remain in life-threatening condition after the stabbing of 10 passengers on a London-bound train in eastern England, in what officials described as “an isolated incident”.
Police initially said nine of the 10 people wounded on Saturday were in a life-threatening condition. On Sunday, British Transport Police Superintendent John Loveless said four of those had since been discharged.
So far, two people have been arrested over the attack, it added.
The Cambridgeshire police said they were called at 19:39 GMT on Saturday after reports that multiple people had been stabbed on a train, the 6:25pm service from Doncaster to London King’s Cross.
“Armed officers attended and the train was stopped at Huntingdon, where two men were arrested,” the police said.
Defence Minister John Healey told Britain’s Sky News on Sunday that there did not appear to be a wider threat to the public after the incident on the London-bound train.
“The early assessment is that this was an isolated incident, an isolated attack,” Healey told Sky News on Sunday.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer called it an “appalling incident” which was “deeply concerning”, while Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood said she was “deeply saddened” and urged people to avoid comment and speculation.
The government is keen to stop rumours spreading on social media following an incident in Southport in northwest England in 2024, when internet claims over the murder of three young girls sparked days of rioting across the country.
Credit: aljazeera.com








