UK police may have shot victim in synagogue attack

Sam Tabahriti and Hannah McKay |

Police are investigating after a car and knife terrorist attack outside a synagogue in Manchester.
Police are investigating after a car and knife terrorist attack outside a synagogue in Manchester.

British police might have accidentally shot two victims, including one who died, in their attempts to bring under control an attack on a Manchester synagogue during Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.

In Thursday’s attack two men, Adrian Daulby, 53, and Melvin Cravitz, 66, were killed after a British man of Syrian descent drove a car into pedestrians and then began stabbing several people outside Manchester’s Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue.

The attacker, whom armed officers shot dead at the scene, was not carrying a firearm, said Greater Manchester Police chief constable Steve Watson, though one of those killed suffered a gunshot wound.

Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria at the site of the synagogue attack
Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria visit the site of the Manchester synagogue attack. (AP PHOTO)

“It follows therefore this injury may have been sustained as a tragic and unforeseen consequence of the urgently required action taken by my officers to bring this vicious attack to an end”, Watson said in a statement on Friday.

Watson said another worshipper was believed to have suffered a non life-threatening gunshot wound, and it was thought both victims were close together behind the synagogue door, as worshippers tried to prevent the attacker gaining entry.

Police have named the attacker as Jihad al-Shamie, 35, and said they could find no records to show he had been referred to the government’s anti-radicalisation program.

The British government vowed to redouble its efforts to tackle anti-Semitism as the Jewish community reeled from the attack.

On Friday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer visited the site of the attack and spoke with members of the Jewish community. 

Flowers laid near Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation synagogue
Britain’s government is vowing to do more to combat anti-Semitism following the Manchester attack. (AP PHOTO)

He did not make any public statements, but said earlier that al-Shamie wanted to “attack Jews because they are Jews”.

Police also urged organisers of a planned protest in London this weekend in support of a banned pro-Palestinian group to cancel or postpone the event, saying it would divert police resources needed to protect fearful communities.

Organisers said the protest, the latest in a series in which police have arrested more than 1500 people, would go ahead and it was the police’s choice whether to make more arrests of people “peacefully holding signs”.

Like other European countries and the United States, Britain has recorded a sharp rise in anti-Semitic incidents in the nearly two years since the war in Gaza started.

Israel has accused Britain of allowing rampant anti-Semitism to spread through its cities and universities, and repeated that criticism after Thursday’s attack.

Police stand guard as Palestinian supporters stage a protest in London
The UK’s interior minister criticised the pro-Palestinian protests that went ahead after the attack. (AP PHOTO)

Starmer in September announced that Britain was recognising a Palestinian state, a decision that was criticised by Israel as a “huge reward to terrorism”.

Britain’s interior minister, Shabana Mahmood, criticised pro-Palestinian protests that took place hours after the Manchester attack, calling them un-British and dishonourable and urging people to show a bit more “humanity and some love towards a community that is grieving”.

The killing shocked Britain’s Jews, particularly in Manchester, home to the country’s largest Jewish community outside London and a highly diverse city.

Many Jewish leaders noted they were the only faith in Britain that routinely required security at its institutions.

The year 2024 was the second worst on record for anti-Semitic incidents in Britain, surpassed only by 2023, according to the Community Security Trust, which provides security to Jewish organisations across Britain. 

Members of the Jewish community comfort each other near the synagogue
Britain’s Jewish community is in shock after the deadly synagogue attack on Yom Kippur. (AP PHOTO)

It recorded more than 3500 incidents in 2024.

Islamophobic incidents in Britain have also increased since the start of the Gaza war.

There was a heavy police presence at the scene of the attack on Friday morning, with debris still lying in the street and bunches of flowers being left nearby.

Dawud Taj, a 28-year-old from Manchester, said the government should have done a better job protecting people.

“There’s an atmosphere in the air,” he told Reuters as he walked to the city centre, “and everything feels a little bit shaky”.

Reuters