LONDON—Four men have been arrested after a 3-year-old boy was attacked with a corrosive substance in the UK.
The boy was attacked while sitting in his stroller in a Home Bargains store in Worcester, West Midlands, on Saturday, July 21.
He was left with serious burns on his face and arm although he has now been released from hospital. The long-term implications of his injuries are unknown, West Mercia Police said.
Three men were arrested in London on suspicion of conspiracy to commit grievous bodily harm and are aged 22, 25, and 26, police said.
A 39-year-old man from Wolverhampton in the West Midlands was arrested on Sunday, July 22 on the same charges and is in police custody.
Police said the motive for the attack was “unclear” but they were treating it as a “deliberate act towards the child.”
“Our thoughts are with the little boy and his family at this time and we are absolutely committed to getting to the bottom of this incident.”
‘My baby, my baby, what have they done to my baby?’
One witness told the UK’s Mirror newspaper, “There was a bit of shouting and screaming in the store but then it all went quiet. Then this woman ran outside and started screaming that her baby had been hurt and needed help.“The mother was sitting outside the shop, screaming, ‘My baby, my baby, what have they done to my baby?’”
The boy was treated in the store by West Midlands Ambulance Service before he was transferred to hospital.
John Campion, West Mercia Police and Crime Commissioner, said the incident was “upsetting” for people in the local area, “This sort of crime is exceptionally rare in West Mercia, but such an attack has no place in any community whatsoever, particularly when a young child has been hurt.”
Worcester City Council leader Marc Bayliss described the attack as “absolutely pure evil,” adding, “Worcester is not that sort of place. We are a quintessential small English city. I have never heard of an acid attack in Worcester so this is absolutely not something we have any experience of.”
Attacks with corrosive substances like acid have been on the rise in the UK for the last few years, although they are mainly associated with gang violence.
The acid causes skin to melt, leaving victims with disfigurement, medical issues, and psychological trauma.
The figure has trebled since 2014 they say, costing the country 60 million pounds ($80 million) a year.