At First, It Looked Like It Might Be A Terror Attack...
Posted: Sat Nov 25, 2017 5:13 am
But then it turned out to probably be just a fairly mild case of Black Friday "shopping rage"...
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/ho ... 74521.html
Take completely understandable British jitters about Jihadi terrorist attacks, (the UK has suffered four of them this year) add nerves frayed by shopping stress, and a fist fight on a subway platform sets off a full-blown panic...
Very fortunate that no one was hurt in the rush to escape the vicinity of "the attack"...
This incident would make a very interesting case study in group psychology...
More:Oxford Circus incident latest: Tube platform 'fight' blamed for sparking terror alert
Police say multiple 999 calls prompted terror response amid mass panic on Black Friday
Armed police evacuated the UK’s biggest shopping district as mass panic swept through crowds hunting for discounts on Black Friday, sparking fears of a new attack.[ Yes, Black Friday has become A Thing in the UK]
Witnesses believe a fight on a platform at Oxford Circus tube station spread panic, leading to stampedes and rumours of gunshots, forcing police to trigger their protocol for terror attacks.
British Transport Police have appealed for information after what they described as an “altercation between two men on the platform” at Oxford Circus station. They released CCTV images of two men they would like to talk to in relation to the incident.
Screaming crowds were ordered to take shelter in shops as the station was evacuated at the start of Friday’s rush hour, but investigations have not yet found any evidence of gunfire or casualties.
The British Transport Police (BTP) said its officers received reports of shots fired on the westbound Central Line platform at Oxford Circus at 4.37pm, as passengers fled up exits towards Oxford Circus and Regent Street.
“This caused a significant level of panic which resulted in numerous calls from members of the public reporting gunfire,” a spokesperson said.
“Officers responded in line with our procedures of a terrorist incident, this included armed officers from BTP and the Metropolitan Police.
“A full and methodical search of the station and Oxford Street was conducted by our specially trained firearms officers but they did not find any evidence of gunfire at the station.”
As the cause of the alert remained unconfirmed, several high-profile figures were condemned for spreading incorrect information on social media.
Former EDL leader Tommy Robinson deleted a tweet on “what looks like another jihad attack”, while singer Olly Murs reported baseless rumours of gunshots inside Selfridges while it was being evacuated as a precaution, and Sky News presenter Kay Burley repeated false claims of a “man with a gun”.
Passengers on the platform at the time claimed the panic was started by a fight between two men, describing how the evacuation order was prompted by a member of the public pushing an emergency button.
Regan Warner said she saw a man bumping into another man on the “overcrowded platform” at 4.35pm.
“They exchanged words, then a punch to the gut, then a full-out fight,” she added.
“People were trying to break it up, there was lots of yelling. People were running away, a woman fainted, children were scared and crying.
“The emergency button was pressed. The fight was broken up and the parties walked in opposite directions.”
She jumped on a departing Tube train, hearing an announcement being given out over the station announcement system ordering a full evacuation as it departed.
Ms Warner’s account was echoed by a Twitter user called Annabel, who described how “crying and screaming” around the fight spread panic, which was compounded by thousands of people fleeing to street level.
“It turned into a stampede in rush hour on Black Friday … Terrifying the street and then rumours as usual spread, and caused even more fear,” she wrote.
Another witness, Lysi P, said mass panic started after the evacuation announcement went out, adding: “As the speakers went off I saw everyone run from the platform – therefore I can only assume that people panicked.”
Ryan Butcher, a reporter for The Independent who was in another part of the station at the time, said the announcement told everyone to evacuate because of “a reported emergency”.
“I just heard screams, someone shouted 'run’,” he added. “People started falling over in the streets. I saw everyone running into buildings so I went into the nearest one.”
Mr Butcher was sheltering in a nearby restaurant, where he said other people were “shaking and crying”, adding: “It's just terrifying.”
He was later allowed to leave by police officers, who were lifting security cordons in the area as searches for the cause of the alarm continued.
Police said they had responded “as if the incident was terrorism” because of the nature and number of 999 calls from different locations in the Tube station and above ground around Oxford Street.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/ho ... 74521.html
Take completely understandable British jitters about Jihadi terrorist attacks, (the UK has suffered four of them this year) add nerves frayed by shopping stress, and a fist fight on a subway platform sets off a full-blown panic...
Very fortunate that no one was hurt in the rush to escape the vicinity of "the attack"...
This incident would make a very interesting case study in group psychology...