George Donedo was stood at the cordon in Streatham on Monday morning speaking to reporters. “I did actually witness the shooting myself,” he said.
Donedo had been due to take his daughter to the library that afternoon to return books, but she said she didn’t want to go so he went alone.
“Whilst walking down that way I noticed an Arab-looking gentleman running in my direction,” he said. Following him “there were two or three officers”.
Donedo initially thought the commotion was gang-related. “All of a sudden you heard two shots ringing out and then this gentleman stopped,” he said. “Whilst he was still standing I think there was third shot and he was on the floor.
“You can see his whole body was shaking and he was trying to reach out for something, and he just stopped moving, and that’s when the police officer screamed that he’s got something on him and we should go to the library.”
Donedo said he and other passers by were kept in the library for several minutes before they were directed out of a back door.
“I’m just grateful that my daughter never saw that,” he said.
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Several hundred metres of Streatham High Road remains cordoned off. The road, normally one of south London’s busiest commuter routes, is quiet, with pedestrians walking via side streets to get to train stations.
In a nearby cafe, staff spoke of their shock at the attack in an unremarkable residential area. Sudesh Amman launched his attack outside a Boots shop, and one woman said she had been standing there only 20 minutes before.
“I was doing the shopping and I was back here [in the cafe] and then I saw what had happened,” said Klaudyna Grzelka, 32, from behind the counter at Nostro coffee on the high road.
“I stayed watching for 30 minutes, maybe more, because I didn’t know what to do, because the buses were stuck and I couldn’t get home. It was a lot of police, a lot of ambulances, a lot of helicopters – I thought it was an accident, I didn’t expect that it was this thing.
“I didn’t expect that something can happen in this area, in Streatham. You think you can feel safe here – it’s our home. You know, you can’t feel safe anymore, you know what I mean?”
A local parents’ network on Facebook was filled with posts about the attack. Some had earlier been deleted, including one with a picture of the attacker after he had been shot dead that quickly circulated among residents on Sunday afternoon.
One parent had posted a screengrabbed message from a local primary school warning of travel problems. It added: “School is open as usual and we will reassure children as they may feel worried or anxious. If anyone was directly affected or witnessed what happened please speak to a member of staff.”
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Rishi Sunak, the chief secretary to the Treasury, declined to give any details of what new measures the government would put in place in the wake of the attack during a broadcast round on Monday, noting that Boris Johnson has already promised a new counter-terror bill.
“Today he will outline some more, and in regard to all of this, people should be under no illusion about our determination to keep everybody safe,” Sunak told BBC1’s Breakfast.
Sunak denied that cuts to prison and probation services were a key part of the problem. In December, the former chief inspector of prisons, Nick Hardwick, said the service had been “haemorrhaging experienced staff and struggling with chaotic reforms”.
“The counter-terrorism budget, which is what we’re dealing with here, has actually been increased every year for the last five or six years,” Sunak said.
“It now up 30% or 40% from where it was several years ago. And we just announced a 10% increase, taking to almost £1bn for the forthcoming year.”
The government, he said, was doubling the number of specific counter-terror probation officers and creating new places in probationary hostels: “This is all forming part of the plans that we’re putting in place to keep people safe.”
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