The
fatal stabbing of Conservative British MP Sir
David Amess has been declared a terrorist incident,
Metropolitan Police have confirmed.
The 69-year-old, who had been an MP since 1983, was fatally injured while meeting constituents at
Belfairs Methodist Church in Leigh-on-Sea near Southend at midday on Friday.
In a statement, the Met said Senior National Coordinator for Counter Terrorism Policing, Deputy Assistant Commissioner
Dean Haydon, had formally declared the incident as terrorism. The investigation is being led by counter-terrorism officers.
The early investigation has revealed "a potential motivation linked to the extremism," the force said.
A 25-year-old man arrested at the scene on suspicion of murder is in custody at an Essex police station.
Official sources told the PA news agency the man is believed to be a British national of Somali heritage.
As part of the investigation, officers were also carrying out searches at two addresses in the London area, the Met said.
The force believe the man acted alone and are not seeking anyone else in connection with the matter at this time, but inquiries into the circumstances of the incident are continuing.
Home Secretary Priti Patel has asked all police forces to review security arrangements for MPs "with immediate effect" following the attack.
Chief constable of Essex Police Ben-Julian Harrington said 69-year-old Southend West MP Sir David was "simply dispensing his duties when his life was horrifically cut short."
Tory veteran Sir David, who was described by Prime Minister Boris Johnson as "one of the kindest, nicest, most gentle people in politics," had been an MP since 1983 and was married with five children.
Patel met police and representatives of the security and intelligence agencies after the stabbing, which took place as Sir David met with local people in his Southend West constituency.
"The Home Secretary has asked all police forces to review security arrangements for MPs with immediate effect and will provide updates in due course," her spokesman said.
The Daily Telegraph said the review would examine Operation Bridger, a nationwide police protective security operation established in 2016 after several threats to MPs following Parliamentary debates on Syria.
The Home Secretary will make a statement to Parliament on the review on Monday, The Times reported.
The attack on Tory MP came just five-and-a-half years after Labour MP Jo Cox was killed by a far right extremist in her Batley and Spen constituency in West Yorkshire.
The Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle said police were contacting all MPs to check on their security in the wake of Sir David's killing.
"It is about doing the right things working with the police constabularies right across the United Kingdom because it is about joining that up," Sir Lindsay told BBC2's Newsnight.
"I know that they are contacting all the MPs to check about their safety, to reassure them, because in the end we have got to make sure that is a priority."
"Those people who do not share our values or share democracy, they will not win and we won't let them win. We will continue to look at security, that is ongoing and it will continue," he added.
Sir Lindsay said earlier that while it was right that security was reviewed following the latest incident, it was important to avoid what he called "knee-jerk" reactions.
"What we want to do is make sure MPs can carry out their duties. We have got to make sure MPs are safe," he told BBC Radio 4's PM programme.
His sentiments were echoed by the the Father of the House - the longest-serving sitting MP - Sir Peter Bottomley.
"I predict all over the country this weekend, next weekend and in the months to come, MPs will hold advice sessions. That is what we do," he told the PA news agency.
"There is no perfect security for anybody. My view has always been that in many other walks of life you are at far greater risk than a Member of Parliament," Bottomley added.
"MPs may get exceptional publicity. We are not exceptional people. We're ordinary people trying to do an ordinary job as well as we can. We accept the risks."
"The question is - should MPs stop meeting their constituents face-to-face? The answer is we will go on meeting our constituents face-to-face," he added.
It is unclear at this stage whether the attacker had booked an appointment to see Sir David, was waiting for him or arrived during the MP's regular meeting time with constituents.