Police are investigating a shocking knife attack in South London where a man brandished a foot-long blade on a busy high street.
Footage of the incident has circulated online, showing the attacker dismount from a bike and draw the sword-like weapon.
His target is in a car, and as they try to escape, smashed into a vehicle in front. With the target trapped, the knifeman attempts to smash the car’s window before the victim leaps out and flees for his life.
A Metropolitan Police spokesman told the Croydon Advertiser that no one has been arrested in connection with the incident.
The spokesman said: “We were called at around 5 p.m. to London Road, in Croydon, after someone approached a vehicle brandishing a weapon.
“With that in mind, the driver of the car has collided with another vehicle. The driver of the car, who the suspect approached with the weapon, made off on foot from the vehicle.
“The victim later returned to the scene to speak to officers but the suspect made off from the scene. No injuries were reported and no arrests made.”
London is currently experiencing a violent crime wave, which has accelerated under the leadership of London’s left-wing Labour mayor Sadiq Khan.
In April, it was reported that recorded machete attacks in the UK have shot up by nearly five times in just three years, with the majority taking place in London.
The soaring number of crimes committed with large, deadly blades means there is now an average of 15 machete incidents every day in Britain, or one every 90 minutes.
In January, Office of National Statistics (ONS) figures showed that in the year to September 2017 the police recorded a massive 37,443 offences involving a knife or sharp instrument.
This represents a 21 per cent surge on the previous year, and the highest number of blade attacks since records began seven years ago.
The rise in knife crime was larger in London, jumping by 38 per cent, and gang-related acid attacks are also on the rise.
Across the United Kingdom, violent crime overall surged by 20 per cent, robbery was up by 29 per cent, and sex offences rose by 23 per cent.