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View Full Version : Car hits crowd watching Dutch queen, kills 4


samanthajane13
04-30-2009, 02:51 PM
By CYNTHIA BOLL, Associated Press Writer Cynthia Boll, Associated Press Writer – 26 mins ago

APELDOORN, Netherlands – A Dutch driver careened through police barriers and plowed into a crowd of merrymakers cheering and waving at their popular queen on Thursday, in a premeditated assault that killed four people and injured 13 others, authorities said.

The speeding car, already dented apparently from catapulting bystanders into the air, passed within a few meters of the open-topped bus carrying Queen Beatrix and her family down a parade route, then smashed into a stone monument.

"I think that it has become clear that this happened with premeditation," Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende said.

Neither he nor law enforcement agencies would give a motive. But Dutch media, citing neighbors, said the assailant recently was fired from his job and was to be evicted from his home. Police identified him as a 38-year-old Dutch man with no history of mental illness or police record, but they would not release his name.

Officials in Apeldoorn said the driver had a map of the queen's route.

Celebrations were canceled for Queen's Day, the national holiday that was to draw millions of people to street dances, picnics and outdoor parties under sunny skies around the country. Flags were lowered to half staff.

A visibly shaken Queen Beatrix extended her sympathies to the victims in a brief nationally televised address. "What began as a great day has ended in a terrible tragedy that has shocked us all deeply," she said.

Prosecutors said the driver apparently acted alone and was not linked to any terrorist or ideological group.

"From initial contact with police before the suspect was removed from the car ... we have reason to believe it was a deliberate action," prosecutor Ludo Goossens told reporters.

The driver apparently tried to intercept the bus as it turned a corner to a road leading to the gates of the Het Loo palace a few hundred meters (yards) from the intersection in this eastern Dutch town.

Though the sequence of events was still murky, he apparently crashed his small black car through two sets of police barriers, smashing his windscreen and damaging the front of the vehicle even before slamming into the monument.

The final few seconds were captured on video and film by news teams following the royal family in a press bus.

Reporters saw people thrown high in the air from the impact or tumbling down the street, their broken limbs askew. First aid crews and police officers ran to the victims and applied revival techniques.

The driver, bleeding from the head and nose, was slumped against the seat when police lifted him out and put him into an ambulance.

Apeldoorn Mayor Fred de Graaf said eight of the 13 injured were in serious condition.

"We are speechless that something so terrible could have happened," the queen said in a rare televised appearance. "My family, and I think everybody in the country, sympathize with the victims, their families and friends and all who have been hit so hard by this accident."

Dutch television footage showed Crown Prince Willem-Alexander and his wife, Princess Maxima, standing at their seats in the bus's high open platform and watching in astonishment. Maxima held her hand over her mouth in apparent horror.

The bus was not hit and no one in the queen's entourage was injured.

A policeman narrowly escaped injury when he jumped off his bicycle to avoid being hit.

Shortly after the crash, investigators and a sniffer dog examined the car for explosives, then sliced off the roof of the car for a closer inspection.

Journalist Peter von de Vorst told RTL television that the incident was like watching a horrible movie.

"It was a really nice day. Then you hear a bang. Everyone looks up and you see people indeed flying through the air. This must be a joke or a strange prank. Then suddenly panic, and you realize that something really terrible has happened," he said.

Hundreds of thousands of people flocked to the main Dutch cities on Wednesday night and Thursday to celebrate the national holiday, originally intended to celebrate the birthday of Beatrix's mother Queen Juliana.

The royal family normally spends the day in a small Dutch community.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090430/ap_on_re_eu/eu_netherlands_parade_crash

samanthajane13
04-30-2009, 02:53 PM
Dutch royals escape 'attack' as car slams into festival goers
by Martine Pauwels Martine Pauwels – 27 mins ago

APELDOORN, Netherlands (AFP) – A car slammed into Dutch festival goers Thursday, killing four and injuring 13, as Queen Beatrix looked on in horror in what officials believe was an attack on the royal family.

Investigators said they arrested the seriously injured driver of the black car which rammed into the foot of a monument after mowing down people gathered for the annual Queen's Day royal procession in the central city of Apeldoorn.

"The driver is suspected of trying to carry out an attack on the royal family," prosecution service spokeswoman Ellen Prummel told AFP.

The man, who is in hospital, also faces murder charges.

Justice official Ludo Goossens told journalists in Apeldoorn that the 38-year-old driver probably acted deliberately.

From initial contact with the man, before he was freed from the car, "we have reason to believe that this was a deliberate act".

"There are no indications of terrorist links," Goossens added, nor were there signs of explosives.

Investigators searched the Dutchman's house to try and establish a motive for his actions.

Apeldoorn mayor Fred de Graaf said four people were killed and 13 injured -- five of them seriously.

"The injured were taken to six hospitals in the region, where they are being treated."

They include two members of the police.

Television footage showed members of the royal family, in an open top bus, clutch their hands to their mouths in shock as the car sped through barricades right before their eyes and rammed into the foot of a monument, leaving injured people and battered bicycles in its wake.

Beatrix, Crown Prince Willem Alexander and his wife Maxima were among the royals taking part in the procession.

The car appears on television footage to have already been heavily damaged before slamming into the monument.

Paramedics were seen rushing to assist people lying injured on the ground among pools of blood and scattered shoes, as anguished cries filled the air and bystanders started running around in obvious shock.

A policeman on a bicycle managed to get out of the way of the car, identified as a small Suzuki Swift, just seconds before it hit the pillar.

"Many people narrowly escaped death," one witness told broadcaster NOS. "I was standing near the monument and the car was coming straight at me. My legs are still shaking."

Hundreds of thousands of Dutch took to the streets in several cities Thursday morning in orange wigs and bizarre hats to celebrate Queen's Day, a national holiday and annual festival to mark the birthday of Beatrix's mother Juliana, who would have been 100 this year.

But the festivities soon turned to mourning with official celebrations cancelled in many areas as the national flag was flown at half mast at the royal palace at Apeldoorn and government buildings.

The streets of Apeldoorn, where crowds thronged earlier, had all but emptied a few hours after the incident and the festive decorations were taken down.

Beatrix expressed shock at the events, telling the nation in a televised address she was "speechless that something so terrible could have happened".

Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende also expressed "deep shock" and described it as "a sad day".

European Commission President Jose Barroso sent a message of condolences, saying he was "deeply shocked at the terrible news of the casualties at the Queen's Day festivities in the Netherlands".


http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090430/wl_afp/netherlandsroyalsaccident4th