The Metropolitan Police on Wednesday released new images of a man suspected of multiple assaults on Jewish males in north London.
The Met have been looking for the man since Aug. 20 following reports of five unprovoked attacks on Aug. 18.
Detective Chief Inspector Yasmin Lalani said on Friday that the police retain an open mind regarding the motive behind the assaults, but the incidents were being treated as hate crimes.
In the latest development, police have established that the man stayed at a hostel on Seven Sisters Road in Hackney between Aug. 17 and Aug. 19.
Lalani said on Wednesday that the police “remain determined to identify the man responsible for these unprovoked attacks.”
Lalani appealed to people who stayed at the same hostel and at the same time with the suspect to come forward if they have information.
Lalani also urged the suspect to come forward.
“It is vital that we bring these incidents to a conclusion,” Lalani said.
After the 64-year-old man was injured on his way to his synagogue, London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he “utterly condemn[s] this appalling attack.”
“Let me be clear, racist abuse and hate crime, including anti-Semitism, have absolutely no place in our city,” the Muslim mayor wrote on Twitter on Aug. 23.
The victim told the PA news agency on Aug. 22 that he could not remember the incident as he had been knocked unconscious.
“I hit my head on the wall and that was it, I have no recollection,” he said.
“The police are taking this extremely seriously because there is an awful lot of anxiety in the community, but we are a very tight-knit, welcoming, and loving community.”