Barcelona In Terror
Authorities said the death toll could rise, with more than 100 people injured, some seriously.
Police
said they arrested two men, a Moroccan and a man from Spain's north
African enclave of Melilla, though neither was the driver. Witnesses
said the driver fled on foot.
It was still not clear how many attackers had been involved.
Hours
beforehand, one person was killed in an explosion in a house in a town
southwest of Barcelona, in an incident linked to the attack, police
added. Residents of the house were preparing explosives, a police source
said.
As the manhunt continued into the night,
police said several attackers were killed in a shootout during an
operation against what they called a possible "terror attack" in
Cambrils, another town south of Barcelona.
Earlier
in Barcelona, witnesses said the white van zigzagged at high speed down
Las Ramblas, a busy avenue thronged with tourists, ramming pedestrians
and cyclists, sending some hurtling through the air and leaving bodies
strewn in its wake.
Islamic State's Amaq news
agency said: "The perpetrators of the Barcelona attack are soldiers of
the Islamic State and carried out the operation in response to calls for
targeting coalition states" - a reference to a U.S.-led coalition
against the Sunni militant group.
Spain has
several hundred soldiers in Iraq providing training to local forces in
the fight against Islamic State, but they are not involved in ground
operations.
The Islamic State claim could not immediately be verified.
If
the involvement of Islamist militants is confirmed, it would be the
latest in a string of attacks in the past 13 months in which they have
used vehicles to bring carnage to the streets of European cities.
That
modus operandi - crude, deadly and very hard to prevent - has killed
well over 100 people in Nice, Berlin, London and Stockholm.
British tourist Keith Welling, who arrived in
Barcelona on Wednesday with his wife and 9-year-old daughter, said they
saw the van drive past them down the avenue and took refuge in a
restaurant when panic broke out and the crowd started running.
"People
were shouting and we heard a bang and someone cried that it was a
gunshot ... Me and my family ran into the restaurant along with around
40 other people.
"At first people were going crazy in there, lots of people crying, including a little girl around three years old."
It
was the deadliest attack in Spain since March 2004, when Islamist
militants placed bombs on commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people
and wounding more than 1,800.
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy announced three days of official mourning for what he called a "jihadist attack."
The
Spanish royal household said on Twitter: “They are murderers, nothing
more than criminals who are not going to terrorize us. All of Spain is
Barcelona.”
U.S. President Donald Trump said: "The United
States condemns the terror attack in Barcelona, Spain, and will do
whatever is necessary to help."
He added: "Be tough & strong, we love you!"
Belgium's foreign minister said a Belgian was among the dead.
Regional head Carles Puigdemont said people had been flocking to hospitals in Barcelona to give blood.
Susana Elvira Carolina, 33, who works at a shop on Las Ramblas, had just entered her building when the van struck.
"We
had a window and you could see the bodies lying from there, you could
see how people were run over ... We were shutting down the blinds but
people kept coming in and we had to keep it open so they could enter the
shop."
The incident took place at the height of the
tourist season in Barcelona, which is one of Europe's top travel
destinations with at least 11 million visitors a year.
French
President Emmanuel Macron, whose nation has suffered some of Europe's
deadliest militant attacks in recent years, tweeted: "All my thoughts
and France's solidarity to the victims of the tragic attack in
Barcelona."
A Vatican spokesman said Pope
Francis was praying for the victims and wanted to express his closeness
to all Spanish people, especially the victims and their families.
Authorities
in Vic, a small town outside Barcelona, said a van had been found there
in connection with the attack. Spanish media had earlier reported that a
second van had been hired as a getaway vehicle.
Barcelona
is the capital of the wealthy northeastern region of Catalonia, which
plans to hold a popular vote on Oct. 1 on whether it should secede from
Spain. The central government says the vote cannot go ahead because it
is unconstitutional.
Before Thursday's attack,
government data showed that police had arrested 11 suspected jihadists
in the Barcelona area so far this year, more than anywhere else in
Spain.
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