UK police charge man with stabbing attack on two Jewish Londoners

A 45-year-old suspect has been formally charged by British police in connection with a broad-daylight stabbing attack that injured two Jewish men in north London’s Golders Green, an incident that has deepened anxiety among the UK’s Jewish community and triggered urgent government action to address a documented surge in antisemitism.

The Metropolitan Police confirmed on Friday that Essa Suleiman, a British national who was born in Somalia and moved to the UK during childhood, faces three counts of attempted murder and one charge of carrying a bladed weapon in a public space. One of the attempted murder charges stems from an unrelated altercation Wednesday in south London, where Suleiman allegedly confronted a flat occupant while armed with a knife. The remaining charges relate directly to the Golders Green attack, an area known for its large, long-established Jewish population.

The stabbing left two men — a 76-year-old and a 34-year-old — with non-life-threatening injuries. Both were treated on-site before being transferred to hospital for further care. Police confirmed the younger victim has been discharged, while the older victim remains in stable condition. Counter Terrorism Policing is leading the investigation, which was immediately classified as a terrorist incident.

“We are determined to get justice for the victims,” said Commander Helen Flanagan, lead of the investigation team, in a formal statement. “Now that a person has been charged, I would urge everyone to avoid any further speculation in relation to this case so that justice can run its course.” Suleiman is scheduled to make his first court appearance at Westminster Magistrates’ Court later Friday.

The attack comes amid a sharp upward trend in antisemitic incidents across the United Kingdom, with monitoring groups recording a dramatic surge after the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. The incident sparked widespread anger from British Jewish communities, who have repeatedly accused the national government of failing to provide adequate protection for Jewish people and sites. When Prime Minister Keir Starmer visited the attack site Thursday, he was met with boos and heckles from attendees.

In response to growing public pressure, Starmer pledged a new wave of security enhancements for the UK Jewish community in a televised address from Downing Street. He called on all British citizens to stand together against antisemitism, saying, “everyone decent in this country to open their eyes to Jewish pain, Jewish suffering and Jewish fear.”

Senior law enforcement officials have echoed warnings that antisemitism is becoming increasingly embedded in British society. Met Police Commissioner Mark Rowley told Times Radio on Friday that the country is “facing a building pandemic of antisemitism in society.” He added that policing is only addressing the immediate outcomes of hate-based extremism, arguing, “We need work done upstream to tackle those attitudes in society which are far too prevalent.”

The UK Home Office has already implemented urgent policy changes in response to the rising threat. Officials confirmed this week that the national terrorism threat level has been raised to “severe” — the second-highest tier in the UK’s five-tier classification system — meaning another attack is highly likely over the next six months. The government also allocated an extra £25 million ($33 million) to fund increased protective security for Jewish sites across the country, including synagogues, schools, community centers, and other places of worship.

This latest attack comes nearly seven months after a fatal attack on a synagogue in Manchester, and follows a string of recent arson incidents targeting Jewish properties in north London. Monitoring groups note that alongside the surge in antisemitism, Islamophobic incidents have also risen sharply in the same period. Starmer is facing growing pressure from opposition and conservative voices to introduce tighter restrictions on pro-Palestinian protests, which critics claim have become a breeding ground for antisemitic rhetoric. His government already expanded police powers to regulate public demonstrations last year. Nigel Farage, leader of the hard-right Reform UK party, also visited the attack site Thursday, accusing authorities of being overly lenient on what he described as discriminatory chants at protests.