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On 29 November 2019, a stabbing attack occurred in Fishmongers' Hall on the north bank of the River Thames next to London Bridge in Central London, United Kingdom. Five people were stabbed, and two died of their injuries. After being restrained by members of the public, the attacker was shot by City of London Police and died at the scene. Police declared the attack a terrorist incident. The assailant was identified as Usman Khan. Khan had been attending the 'Learning Together' seminar in Fishmongers' Hall, run by the Cambridge Institute of Criminology to help offenders reintegrate into society following their release from jail. The 'Learning Together' programme was set up in 2014 by University of Cambridge academics Ruth Armstrong and Amy Ludlow from the Faculty of Law and Institute of Criminology to "bring together people in criminal justice and higher education institutions to study alongside each other in inclusive and transformative learning communities", and enables students and prisoners to work together. To celebrate its fifth anniversary, participants were invited to an offender rehabilitation conference to be held at Fishmongers' Hall, which is at the northern end of London Bridge, in the City of London, on 29 November 2019. Khan was banned from entering London under terms of his release, but was granted a one day exemption to attend the ex-prisoners conference. At 13:58 on 29 November, City of London Police were called to an incident at Fishmongers' Hall. Khan, while attending the 'Learning Together' programme, and wearing a fake suicide vest, threatened to blow up the hall. Holding two kitchen knives taped to his wrists, using similar tactics to the 2017 attack, he began stabbing people inside the building. Several fought back, including a man who grabbed a narwhal tusk from the wall to use against the attacker as a weapon, and a convicted murderer attending the conference. Khan fled and began stabbing pedestrians outside on the north side of the bridge. Several people were injured before members of the public and a plain-clothes British Transport Police officer, later seen walking away with a knife, restrained and disarmed Khan on the bridge. One of the people who stepped in to fight the attacker drove him back by spraying a fire extinguisher. Armed City of London Police arrived a short time later and surrounded the attacker, who was being held down by a man. They pulled this person away to provide a clear shot, before firing twice. Khan died at the scene. Shortly after midnight on 30 November 2019, Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu named the suspect as 28-year-old British national Usman Khan from Stoke-on-Trent. The attacker was known to police and had links to Islamist extremist groups. He was a convicted terrorist who had been released early on licence from prison in December 2018 following a 2012 conviction for terrorism offences, and was wearing an electronic tag. Khan had been part of a plot, inspired by Al-Qaeda, to establish a terrorist camp on his family's land in Kashmir and bomb the London Stock Exchange. The plot was disrupted by MI5 and the police, as part of MI5's Operation Guava (police Operation Norbury), and Khan was given an indeterminate sentence. Of the nine men involved, Khan was the youngest at 19 and according to Mr Justice Wilkie, Khan and two others were “more serious jihadis” than the others. In 2013, his sentence was revised after an appeal, and he was ordered to serve at least 8 years of his new 16-year sentence, with a 5-year extended licence allowing recall to prison. According to the anti-extremism group Hope not Hate, Khan was a supporter of Al-Muhajiroun, an extremist group with which scores of terrorists were involved. He was a student and a personal friend of Anjem Choudary, an Islamist and terrorism supporter. Khan had previously participated in the 'Learning Together' programme. Two people, a man and a woman, died of stab injuries. The male victim was identified as Jack Merritt, a 25-year-old law and criminology graduate[34] and University of Cambridge administration officer from Cottenham. He was course coordinator for the 'Learning Together' rehabilitation programme. His father said Merritt "would not wish his death to be used as the pretext for more draconian sentences or for detaining people unnecessarily". The female victim was a former University of Cambridge student who has not yet been named. Two other people were seriously injured, and one victim had less serious injuries.