One dead and seven injured after stabbing attacks in the English city of Birmingham

Of the seven people injured, two are in a critical condition.

A police officer at a cordon in Irving Street in Birmingham after a number of people were stabbed in the city centre.

A police officer at a cordon in Irving Street in Birmingham after a number of people were stabbed in the city centre. Source: AAP

A man has been killed and seven people injured in late-night stabbings in a busy nightlife area of the central England city of Birmingham.

Police say they are searching for a lone suspect in what appears to be random attacks.

Chief Superintendent Steve Graham of West Midlands Police says detectives are still investigating the motive but "there is absolutely no suggestion at all that this is terror-related".

West Midlands Police said officers were called to reports of a stabbing shortly after midnight on Sunday. That was soon followed by reports of other stabbings across the city centre over a period of about two hours.
Police said they believed the stabbings were linked and had launched a murder investigation.

Supt Graham said two of the seven injured people, a man and a woman, were in critical condition in hospitals. Five others received "relatively minor" injuries.

The site of one attack is in the city's Gay Village but Graham said there was no suggestion the crime was "motivated by hate".

Police cordoned off an area in the centre of the city full of bars and nightclubs. Witnesses said they were busy on Saturday night, with many people eating and drinking at outdoor tables. More cordons and blue forensic tents were set up about 800m away, near the city's Snow Hill train station.
Cara Curran, a club promoter, said she saw multiple people fighting in the street.

"It was one group of boys against another group of boys," she told the BBC, adding that "racial slurs" were being thrown.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said it was "a very serious incident" and "our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families."

West Midlands Mayor Andy Street urged people "to not speculate about the incident" and to "remain calm but vigilant".

Official statistics show knife crime is on the rise in the UK, where most guns are outlawed, though the number of homicides with blades fell in 2019 from the year before.

Britain has seen several recent knife attacks, including a stabbing rampage in a city park in Reading, near London, in June that killed three people. A Libyan man has been charged.


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Source: Reuters, SBS


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