Melbourne car attack: Two arrested after car hits Flinders Street crowd

Two people have been arrested after a car plowed into a crowd of Christmas shoppers in Melbourne, Australia, Thursday in what police are calling a “deliberate act.”

More than a dozen people were injured when the car hit pedestrians outside Melbourne’s iconic Flinders Street station just after 4.30 p.m. local time.

Victoria Police spokesman told reporters it was too early in the investigation to determine the motivation. Police appealed for witnesses and advised people to stay clear of what they’re calling a “crime scene.”

Flinders Street is one of Melbourne’s busiest pedestrian roads, running between a major train station and the bustling city center. It would have been crowded with commuters and shoppers making their final purchases in the days before Christmas.

Paramedics have taken 14 people to nearby hospitals, Ambulance Victoria said in a statement. Two others are being treated at the scene. The police spokesman told reporters several of those injured were in a critical condition.

Among them was a pre-school age child who was taken to hospital with a head injury, and is in a serious condition, Ambulance Victoria said.

Jim Stoupas, owner of the Walkers Donut shop on Elizabeth Street, told CNN he saw an SUV going about 60 miles an hour (100 kph) down Flinders Street.

“It just plowed into the crowds,” he said. “We heard this noise and we looked up then we just heard bang, bang, bang and people flying everywhere. We had a lot of customers in our shop and they were traumatized.”

Stoupas said police had arrived almost immediately and many officers were still at the scene.

Another witness Cameron Von Borstel said he assumed a car had crashed into a tram when he heard a loud bang from the direction of Flinders Street.

“I went down the street to have a look. I saw about two or three people lying still in the street. People were helping,” he told CNN.

Concrete bollards were erected along the side of some Melbourne city roads by the government in June, after a number of vehicle-related terror attacks around the world.

In December 2016, Australian police announced they had foiled a plot to blow up improvised explosive devices around Melbourne’s city center on Christmas Day, including Flinders Street Station.

It was described as “one of the most substantial terrorist plots that have been disrupted over the last several years.”

The incident comes almost one year after six people were killed when a car plowed into pedestrians along Melbourne’s Bourke Street Mall in January, just a few streets north of Flinders Street station. Police said that incident was not terror-related.

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