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Police officers man a cordoned off area in Woolwich, east London, on May 22, 2013/AFP

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Soldier beheaded in shocking London street attack

Police officers man a cordoned off area in Woolwich, east London, on May 22, 2013/AFP

Police officers man a cordoned off area in Woolwich, east London, on May 22, 2013/AFP

LONDON, May 22 – British police shot and wounded two men after a man thought to be a serving soldier was killed outside a London barracks, in an attack Prime Minister David Cameron called “truly shocking”.

In a dramatic move, the government’s emergency response committee was being summoned following the killing which some eyewitness reports suggested was an attempted beheading using machete-like knives.

Some early reports suggested the attack might be Islamist-related, although there was no official confirmation.

The incident took place in broad daylight in a street around 200 metres (yards) from the Royal Artillery Barracks in Woolwich, a district of southeast London.

Police were called at 2:20pm (1320 GMT) to reports of one man being assaulted by two others.

“A number of weapons were reportedly being used in the attack, and this included reports of a firearm,” said police commander Simon Letchford.

Local police officers, then firearms officers arrived on the scene where they found a man who was later pronounced dead.

“Two men, who we believe from early reports to have been carrying weapons, were shot by police. They were taken to separate London hospitals, they are receiving treatment for their injuries,” Letchford said.

He said there would be a heightened police presence in the area and urged locals to remain calm.

Cameron said on Twitter: “The killing in Woolwich is truly shocking”.

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He added that he had asked Home Secretary Theresa May, Britain’s interior minister, to chair a meeting of COBRA, the government’s emergency civil contingencies committee.

A white and blue police evidence tent was visible in the street and police tape sealed off the scene.

Eyewitness pictures showed an air ambulance landing in the road and three bodies lying on the ground with dozens of onlookers observing the scene after the police arrived.

Nick Raynsford, the member of parliament for Woolwich and Greenwich, said his understanding was that the man found dead was a serving soldier.

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