The
21-year-old man, who police did not name, was carrying a knife
and a computer thumb drive containing information about deadly
attacks in North America and New Zealand, police said.
But he did not appear to be acting for any terrorist groups and
the attack was not being treated as terrorism, police added.
"At the end of the day, it's a horrendous crime and he should
pay for that," New South Wales state police commissioner Mick
Fuller told reporters.
A 21-year-old woman was found dead in an apartment building and
a second woman, 41, was taken to hospital with a stab wound to
her back. She was in stable condition, police said.
They did not say how the first woman died but said the man was
responsible for both attacks. There was no apparent link between
the two women.
Police were investigating a home about 32 km (20 miles) west of
the city where the young man lived with his parents.
The man was in custody and expected to be charged with homicide,
assault and, depending on the outcome of the investigation,
potential terrorism offences, Fuller said.
(For a graphic on 'Site of stabbing in Sydney' click https://tmsnrt.rs/2N2QMDh)
The incident brought downtown traffic to a halt in Australia's
biggest city. Video images on Twitter showed a young man running
across an intersection and jumping onto a car hood, yelling and
waving what appeared to be a long-bladed knife.
The man fell to the ground when the car moved and he was
confronted by a person holding a chair, the video showed. It was
unclear what the man was shouting.
Other footage showed the man pinned to the ground by several
people holding two chairs and a milk crate on top of him.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison praised those who
stopped the assailant.
"The attacker is now in police custody following the brave
actions of those who were present at the scene and were able to
... restrain him," he said.
A woman who answered the telephone at a Subway sandwich shop
near the scene told Reuters, "We saw the person with a knife
over there bleeding.
"The cops are here and they blocked the road right now, so we
can't go outside. They said, 'It's a crime scene, you can't come
out,'" said the woman, who declined to give her name.
State police minister David Elliott also praised the people who
restrained the man.
This is how Sydneysiders respond," he said. "If you want to
behave in this sort of manner, if you want to put life and
property at risk, it's not just the police who will respond."
(Reporting by Byron Kaye, Paulina Duran, Jonathan Barrett in
SYDNEY; Additional reporting by Sonali Paul in MELBOURNE;
Writing by Jonathan Barrett; Editing by Paul Tait and Darren
Schuettler)
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