Tuesday, 5th November 2024

Spanish police shoot dead suspected Barcelona attacker

West Indies and Caribbean News

Monday, 21st August 2017

Younes Abouyaaqoub.

Spanish police have shot and killed a man suspected to be the Islamist militant who drove a van into a Barcelona crowd last week, killing 13 people.

Younes Abouyaaqoub, 22, appeared to be wearing an explosive belt in Subirats, a town near Barcelona. Following the shooting a bomb squad used a robot to approach the man's body.

Abouyaaqoub had been on the run since Thursday after he drove at high speed into heavy crowds strolling along Barcelona's most famous avenue, Las Ramblas.

It was Spain's worst militant attack in over a decade, with Islamic State claiming responsibility.

"The suspect wore what appeared to be an explosive belt. He has been shot down," police said in an official tweet that did not make it unequivocally clear that he had been killed.

Police had asked the rest of Europe to join the manhunt for the Moroccan-born man. They say he fled Las Ramblas on foot amid the chaos of the attack then hijacked a car, stabbing the driver to death, before crashing through a police checkpoint.

Twin attack

Abouyaaqoub had been the only one of 12 accomplices still at large. His mother, Hannou Ghanimi, had appealed for him to surrender, saying she would rather see him in prison than end up dead.

Four people have been arrested so far in connection with the attacks: three Moroccans and a citizen of Spain's North African enclave of Melilla. They will be taken to the high court in Madrid, which has jurisdiction over terrorism matters.

Abouyaaqoub lived in Ripoll, a town north of Barcelona close to French border.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the Barcelona attack as well as a separate deadly assault hours later in the coastal resort town of Cambrils, south of Barcelona.

In Cambrils, a car crashed into passersby and its occupants got out and tried to stab people. Five suspects were shot dead by police, while a Spanish woman died in the attack.

In the roughly seven hours of violence that followed the van's entry into the pedestrian boulevard of Las Ramblas on Thursday afternoon, attackers killed 15 people: 13 on Las Ramblas, the Cambrils victim and the man in the hijacked car.

Of the 120 injured on Las Ramblas, nine remain in a critical condition in hospital.