What we know about the Golders Green stabbings
Two Jewish men have been stabbed in Golders Green, north London, in an attack police have declared as a terrorist incident.
The men,one in his 70s and another in his 30s, remain in a stable condition in hospital. A 45-year-old man has been arrested.
It comes after a spate of arson attacks against Jewish property in London in recent weeks.
Here is what we know so far.
What happened?
The Metropolitan Police said its officers responded at 11:16 BST on Wednesday after receiving reports that people had been stabbed in Highfield Avenue, which runs off Golders Green Road.
The suspect is first seen on CCTV footage taken on Highfield Avenue, timestamped at 11:15.
He is jogging along the pavement towards Golders Green Road when he appears to attack a man, who he chases out of view.
Another clip, filmed from a car driving north along Golders Green Road, shows the suspect chasing after a man on the pavement.
More CCTV footage - timestamped to 11:20 - shows the suspect approaching a bus stop and repeatedly attacking a man waiting there, who he then pushes on to the road and out of view.
Multiple videos and images of the suspect being detained by police have been verified by the BBC.
One officer Tasers him, sending the suspect to the floor.
Police can then be seen administering CPR and later footage shows the suspect being lifted on a stretcher into an ambulance.
The Metropolitan Police released footage from the body-worn cameras of the responding officers. The clip appears to show the suspect walking towards the officers before the Taser is deployed.
Officers can be heard yelling "drop the knife" repeatedlybefore the suspect falls to the ground. They continue to repeat the instruction and kick him while the suspect is on the ground as they work to restrain him and get him to release the weapon.

Who are the victims?
The two Jewish men stabbed in the attack have been named locally as Shloime Rand, 34, and Moshe Shine, 76.
They were treated at the scene and taken to hospital.
Rand was discharged from hospital after receiving treatment for serious stab wounds, Rabbi Levi Schapiro from the Jewish Community Council wrote on X after visiting both men on Wednesday.
Shine's injuries were more serious, Rabbi Schapiro said, although doctors were "optimistic" that he would make a full recovery.
"[Rand is] a living miracle. He could easily have died because of where his wounds were," Rabbi Schapiro said.
Speaking to the BBC from hospital, Rand said he was relieved his injuries had not been worse, adding: "I feel like God's given me back my life."
Recounting Wednesday's attack, he said he was walking down the street when the attacker came towards him and "just stabbed me in the chest".
Asked whether enough had been done to deal with antisemitism, Rand said: "Definitely not. People are now afraid and it's been taken to a new level."
He said it was not enough for Downing Street to make statements that antisemitism would not be tolerated.
"It has to be changed in a very different way to get the streets to be safe again," he said.
Rand's mother, who asked not to be named, told the BBC: "As a mother, I'm pretty horrified that these things could happen in the streets of London, in an innocent community where we try our best not to hurt anyone.
"Shloime was walking on the street minding his own business. I was able to see him yesterday. Thank God, he was conscious the whole time."
She added that the family had been hoping he would be home for the Sabbath on Friday evening.
Meanwhile a friend of Shine's, who asked not to be named, described him as a "very nice, quiet, honest person".
Who is the suspect?
Newsquest/SWNSA 45-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder. Police said he was a British national, born in Somalia.
The BBC understands the suspect being held is Essa Suleiman, from south-east London.
He came to the UK "lawfully as a child", Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood told BBC Breakfast.
The Metropolitan Police confirmed to the BBC that he was referred to the government's counter-terrorism Prevent programme in 2020. A spokesman said the referral was closed that same year.
Following the attack he was initially taken to hospital but later discharged and taken to a London police station where he remains in custody.
He is being held under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act (Pace), and in theory he can be held for up to 96 hours if the police are granted permission by a magistrate, though that may not be necessary in this case.
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said officers "confronted a man they believed to be a terrorist, who refused to show his hands, who was violent and continued to pose a clear threat".
He added that officers feared the suspect was carrying an explosive device and Tasered him while he continued totry to attack and stab them.
Sir Mark said: "We're also working with our partners in the security services to ensure we have a full intelligence picture and one of the lines of inquiry is whether this attack was deliberately targeting the Jewish community in London."
The suspect had a history of serious violence and mental health issues, he added in a statement at the scene on Wednesday afternoon.
The Met later said officers also carried out a search at an address in south-east London, where detectives were investigating an incident that was reported to police and is believed that the suspect is the same individual arrested in Golders Green.
The Met said police were called at approximately 08:50 BST to an address in Great Dover Street, in the Borough area of Southwark, where a "suspect who is reported to have been armed with a knife, is believed to have had an altercation with the occupant before leaving".
What has the reaction been?
Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis, who represents Britain's largest Jewish community, said: "I'm sad to say that today's event proves that if you are visibly Jewish you're not safe and far more needs to be done."
"It's a sustained effort to terrorise the Jewish community, which will not succeed, because we're a strong and resilient community. We face these kind of attacks and these incidents with great fortitude. However, this cannot be allowed to continue."
London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he was "angry", "appalled" and "disgusted" that Jewish people were "living their lives frightened".
King Charles III was "naturally deeply concerned" by the attack, a Buckingham Palace spokesperson said.
"His thoughts and prayers are with the two individuals who were injured and offers his heartfelt gratitude to those who so selflessly rushed to their aid," they added.
Sir Keir Starmer said the attack was "utterly appalling", adding: "Attacks on our Jewish community are attacks on Britain."
On Thursday, the prime minister was heckled as he arrived to meet emergency services who responded to the attack.
At a Downing Street press conference later on Thursday afternoon, Sir Keir said the increase in antisemitic attacks meant Jewish people were "scared to show who they are", scared to go to the synagogue or go to university as a Jew, or send their children to school or tell colleagues they were Jewish.
"Nobody should live like that in Britain, but Jews do," he said.
He promised the government would introduce various measures to tackle antisemitism.
The UK terrorism threat level has also been raised to "severe", meaning a terror attack is "highly likely".
The Home Office said the decision is not solely due to the Golders Green attack, adding the terrorism threat level had been "rising for some time, driven by an increase in broader Islamist and extreme right-wing terrorist threat from individuals and small groups based in the UK".
It also comes against a backdrop of "increased state-linked physical threats which is encouraging acts of violence, including against the Jewish community", it added. The public has been urged to be "vigilant".
What previous incidents have there been?
The attack came after a spate of incidents in recent months targeting Jewish sites:
- 2 October, 2025: Two Jewish people were killed and three left in a serious condition after a car ramming and stabbing attack outside a synagogue in Manchester. One of the men was killed by a bullet fired by police.
- 23 March: Four Jewish charity-owned ambulances were set on fire in the car park of a synagogue in Golders Green
- 15 April: A brick and two bottles thought to contain petrol were thrown at the Finchley Reform Synagogue in north London
- 17 April: Suspicious items, later found to be non-hazardous, were found near the Israeli embassy in London. A video posted to social media claimed the embassy was going to be attacked by drones
- 18 April: A bottle containing a type of accelerant was thrown through the window of Kenton United Synagogue in north-west London
- 27 April: A suspected arson attack was carried out at a memorial wall in Golders Green. The wall contained tributes to people killed by the Iranian regime during anti-government protests earlier this year, as well as a section to those killed in the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel
What has the wider response been?
Attacks on Jewish people in the UK have now become "the biggest national security emergency" since 2017, the government's independent reviewer of terrorism and state threats legislation told the BBC.
Jonathan Hall KC told the BBC's The World Tonight: "There are Brits in London in particular, Manchester, but probably all around the country, who are now thinking they cannot live a normal life. And it's not one attack, it's multiple attacks."
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood told the BBC she was "treating this as an emergency", and described antisemitism as "abhorrent and unacceptable", adding that the Jewish community has "every right" to live in safety.
Mahmood added that she would personally never hesitate to say or do what she must as home secretary, but also as a Muslim, to stamp out antisemitism.
"This land is their land, it is my land too, we share this land and we must all work together to keep each other safe," she says.
The government has announced an extra £25m in funding for increased police patrols and security in Jewish communities after Wednesday's attack in Golders Green.
It says the funding will also be used to put further protections in place around synagogues, schools and community centres.
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp, who was minister for crime and policing from 2022 to 2024, told BBC Breakfast the UK also "urgently" needs more police patrolling Jewish communities to deal with a "relentless increase" in attacks.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage spoke to members of the media in Golders Green on Thursday and accused the prime minister of failing to act.
He said: "Suffice to say that this is not just an attack on Jewish people. This is much bigger, much broader, much more fundamental, and if you're the group currently being targeted, well, who's next?"
