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Spain attacks: Death toll rises to 14 as police hunt for Catalonia cell

Police say they killed five attackers on Thursday night in town south of Barcelona after 13 killed at Las Ramblas
A police officer mans a cordon after the van attack in Barcelona (Reuters)

The driver of the van that ploughed into crowds in Barcelona, killing 13 people, may still be alive and at large, Spanish police said on Friday, denying earlier media reports that he had been shot dead in a Catalan seaside resort.

Josep Lluis Trapero, police chief in Spain's northeastern region of Catalonia, said he could not confirm the driver was one of five men killed.

"It is still a possibility but, unlike four hours ago, it is losing weight," he told regional TV.

The driver abandoned the van and fled on Thursday after speeding along a section of Las Ramblas, the most famous boulevard in Barcelona, leaving a trail of dead and injured among the crowds of tourists and local residents thronging the street.

Police on Friday identified the suspect in the attack on Barcelona's popular Las Ramblas area as 18-year-old Moussa Oukabir, whose older brother Driss Oukabir was arrested in the nearby town of Ripoll. Four arrests were made following the attacks.

The police were still hunting a total of four suspects on Friday, all from Ripoll, Barcelona-based newspaper La Vanguardia reported. Besides Oukabir, the suspected van driver, the others were named as Mohamed Hychami, Younes Abouyaaqoub, and Said Aallaa. 

The Islamic State (IS) group claimed the attack on Las Ramblas on Thursday evening, which was packed with tourists. The death toll could rise, with more than 100 injured, authorities said.

As security forces hunted for the driver of the van, who was seen escaping on foot, police said they had killed five attackers later on Thursday night in Cambrils, a town south of Barcelona, to thwart a separate attack using explosive belts.

One civilian died and five were injured in Cambrils when the attackers ran them over in a car, before police shot them dead and carried out controlled explosions. Police said the Cambrils incident was linked to the earlier van attack in Barcelona.

People were going crazy... lots of people crying, including a little girl around three years old

- Keith Welling, tourist

Before the van ploughed into the tree-lined walkway of Las Ramblas, one person was killed in an explosion in a house in the town of Alcanar in the early hours of Thursday, southwest of Barcelona, police said.

Residents there were preparing explosives, a police source added.

Police said two men had been arrested in Ripoll and Alcanar, both in the region of Catalonia, of which Barcelona is the capital. A third person was later arrested in Ripoll, police said on Friday morning.

Police said the arrested suspects included a Moroccan and a man from Spain's north African enclave of Melilla, though neither was the van driver. They added that the situation in Cambrils was under control.

It was still not clear how many people had been involved in the van attack and other incidents on Thursday.

Witnesses to the van attack said the white vehicle had zigzagged at high speed down Las Ramblas, ramming pedestrians and cyclists, sending some hurtling through the air and leaving bodies strewn in its wake.

The injured and dead came from 34 different countries, the Catalan government said on Friday, including France, Germany, Pakistan and the Philippines.

Bodies on the ground

Mobile phone footage showed several bodies strewn along Las Ramblas, some motionless. Paramedics and bystanders bent over them, treating them and trying to comfort those still conscious.

Around them, the boulevard was deserted, covered in rubbish and abandoned objects including hats, flip-flops and a pram.

Police said they also shot dead on Thursday a man who had driven a car into a police checkpoint in Barcelona, though they had no evidence he was connected with the van attack.

Islamic State's Amaq news agency said: "The perpetrators of the Barcelona attack are soldiers of the Islamic State and carried out the operation in response to calls for targeting coalition states" - a reference to a US-led coalition against the Sunni militant group.

The claim could not immediately be verified.

Spain has several hundred soldiers in Iraq providing training to local forces in the fight against Islamic State, but they are not involved in ground operations.

If the involvement of militants is confirmed, it would be the latest in a string of attacks in the past 13 months in which they have used vehicles to bring carnage to the streets of European cities.

Vehicle attacks

That method of attack - crude, deadly and very hard to prevent - has killed well over 100 people in Nice, Berlin, London and Stockholm.

British tourist Keith Welling, who arrived in Barcelona on Wednesday with his wife and nine-year-old daughter, said they saw the van drive past them down the avenue and took refuge in a restaurant when panic broke out and the crowd started running.

"People were shouting and we heard a bang and someone cried that it was a gunshot... Me and my family ran into the restaurant along with around 40 other people.

"At first people were going crazy in there, lots of people crying, including a little girl around three years old."

It was the deadliest attack in Spain since March 2004, when militants placed bombs on commuter trains in Madrid, killing 191 people and wounding more than 1,800.

Spain's prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, announced three days of official mourning for what he called a "jihadist attack".

The Spanish royal household said on Twitter: "They are murderers, nothing more than criminals who are not going to terrorise us. All of Spain is Barcelona."

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, whose nation has suffered some of Europe's deadliest militant attacks in recent years, tweeted: "All my thoughts and France's solidarity to the victims of the tragic attack in Barcelona."

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Donald Trump, the US president, said: "The United States condemns the terror attack in Barcelona, Spain, and will do whatever is necessary to help."

He added: "Be tough & strong, we love you!"

However Trump later appeared to endorse the mass execution of Muslim militants, alluding to a widely debunked account of tactics used by a US general in the Philippines in the early 1900s.

Trump tweeted: "Study what General Pershing of the United States did to terrorists when caught. There was no more Radical Islamic Terror for 35 years!"

Police investigate at the scene of an attack in Cambrils, south of Barcelona (Reuters)

Belgium's foreign minister said a Belgian was among the dead.

Regional head Carles Puigdemont said people had been flocking to hospitals in Barcelona to give blood.

Susana Elvira Carolina, 33, who works at a shop on Las Ramblas, had just entered her building when the van struck.

"We had a window and you could see the bodies lying from there, you could see how people were run over... We were shutting down the blinds but people kept coming in and we had to keep it open so they could enter the shop."

Authorities in Vic, a small town outside Barcelona, said a van had been found there in connection with the attack. Spanish media had earlier reported that a second van had been hired as a getaway vehicle.

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