Police set up new security barriers around Windsor Castle

Police set up new security barriers around Windsor Castle
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Police have placed extra security barriers around the Windsor Castle in Britain ahead of the regular ‘Changing the Guard’ ceremony on Wednesday. (Reuters)
Police set up new security barriers around Windsor Castle
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An armed police officer guards stands with a colleague at an entrance to Windsor Castle, near to where security barriers have been placed, in Windsor, Britain on Tuesday. (Reuters)
Updated 28 March 2017
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Police set up new security barriers around Windsor Castle

Police set up new security barriers around Windsor Castle

LONDON: Police erected new barriers around Queen Elizabeth’s Windsor Castle home on Tuesday to boost protection a week after a man killed four people in an attack around Parliament in central London.
The additional measures followed a review of security at Windsor, the oldest and largest inhabited castle in the world located about 32 km to the west of the British capital, police said.
The new barriers were put in place ahead of the regular “Changing the Guard” ceremony on Wednesday which sees soldiers in scarlet tunics and bearskin hats parade with an army band through the town of Windsor before heading into the castle.
The ceremony is hugely popular with tourists with more than 1.3 million people visiting the castle every year. Police said the new barriers in Windsor would be in addition to usual road closures.
“While there is no intelligence to indicate a specific threat to Windsor, recent events in Westminster clearly highlight the need for extra security measures to be introduced,” said Dave Hardcastle, assistant chief constable of Thames Valley Police.
“The force believes that it is proportionate and necessary to put in place extra security measures to further protect and support the public and the Guard Change.”
Last Wednesday, Khalid Masood, 52, killed three and injured about 50 people after driving a car into pedestrians on London’s Westminster Bridge before fatally stabbing a policeman in the grounds of Parliament before he was shot dead.
Detectives said they believe he was acting alone.
Rohey Hydara, wife of Masood, said she totally condemned the attack, offering her sympathy to his victims.
“I am saddened and shocked by what Khalid has done,” she said in a statement. “I totally condemn his actions. I express my condolences to the families of the victims that have died, and wish a speedy recovery to all the injured.”
The mother of Masood earlier said she was “deeply shocked, saddened and numbed” by his murderous actions.
In a statement released through the police, Janet Ajao said that “since discovering that it was my son that was responsible, I have shed many tears for the people caught up in this horrendous incident.”
Ajao said she wanted to make it “absolutely clear” that she did not condone his actions or supported the beliefs that led him to carry out the attack.