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Teachers and pupil injured in school stabbing released from hospital, police say

The two teachers and a pupil injured in a school stabbing in Ammanford have been discharged from hospital, Dyfed-Powys Police have said.

George Thompson
Thursday 25 April 2024 17:03 BST
Police at Amman Valley school, in Ammanford, Carmarthenshire (Ben Birchall/PA)
Police at Amman Valley school, in Ammanford, Carmarthenshire (Ben Birchall/PA) (PA Wire)

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The two teachers and a pupil who were hurt in a stabbing at a school in South Wales have been discharged from hospital, police have said.

It comes as the brother of the teacher who helped restrain the girl accused of attacking the teachers and a fellow pupil said he ā€œdoes not think of himself as a heroā€.

The victims were injured at Amman Valley School in Ammanford, Carmarthenshire on Wednesday morning and a teenage girl was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and remains in custody.

One of the teachers injured in the attack has been named as Fiona Elias, the head of Year 7, by Prime Minister Rishi Sunakā€™s official spokesman.

The second adult is reported to be Liz Hopkin, a special needs teacher.

The spokesman said the Prime Ministerā€™s thoughts are with those injured and offered praise for staff and students for responding so calmly and bravely to the incident.

While online lessons will continue, the school will stay closed for in-person teaching on Friday, Carmarthenshire County Council has said.

A council spokesperson said that Dyfed Powys Police believe they are likely to conclude their investigation at the school by the end of the day on Thursday.

Whether the school will reopen on Monday has not been confirmed.

A Dyfed-Powys Police spokeswoman confirmed on Thursday that the victims have now been discharged from hospital.

Carmarthenshire Superintendent Ross Evans said:Ā ā€œAs can be expected with an incident as serious as this, there will continue to be a police presence at the school throughout the day today.

ā€œOfficers at the scene will be looking for evidence to assist the investigation, while other specialist teams will analyse any information submitted through our dedicated web page.

ā€œWe understand the level of concern in the community as people try to process the incident.

ā€œWe urge anyone affected by yesterdayā€™s events to seek support, and not to share any videos, photos or information that might cause further distress to pupils or parents at the school.ā€

A teenage boy was arrested overnight on suspicion of making threats which referenced the stabbings at the school, Dyfed-Powys Police said.

Police executed a warrant at the boyā€™s home, in the Cross Hands area, and recovered a BB gun.

Mr Evans said the investigations were being dealt with separately but added that ā€œofficers will be seeking to establish both the credibility of the threats, and whether there was any connection between the alleged offencesā€.

Darrel Campbell, the teacher who restrained the alleged Ammanford school attacker, does not think of himself as a hero, his brother has insisted.

Mr Campbell disarmed the alleged attacker and put her in an armlock ahead of emergency services arriving at the school.

Speaking to the PA news agency,Ā CefinĀ Campbell, the Senedd member for Mid and West Wales, said: ā€œHeā€™s embarrassed by all the attention that heā€™s had, he certainly doesnā€™t consider himself a hero in any way.

ā€œHe just told me he just did what most people would have done ā€“ he acted instinctively, he saw the danger and took action.

ā€œHe really wants to play down anything more than just being a normal citizen, albeit a teacher in a school facing a very challenging situation.ā€

Darrel Campbell, who has worked at the school for around 40 years, officially retired last year but was brought back on a part-time basis to help provide pastoral care.

Both he and his brother attended the school as pupils.

Cefin Campbell said he expects his brother will return to work when the school reopens.

He probably did what most people would have done in the same situation, try to calm things and restrain people from making the situation worse

Darrel Campbell's brother Cefin Campbell

He said: ā€œThe school is closed today so heā€™s off but he has every intention of going back whenever the school reopens.

ā€œHe wants to be there, with the other staff members, to support each other and to support the pupils that are under their care.

ā€œHeā€™s taken that role very seriously throughout his life and he will go back to make sure that the pupils are in a good place.ā€

Speaking on BBC Radio Wales, the politician said: ā€œHeā€™s been a teacher there for 40 years and he was involved in the incident yesterday in the sense that he was the first at the scene and he obviously had to deal with a very distressing and chaotic situation.

ā€œHe probably did what most people would have done in the same situation, try to calm things and restrain people from making the situation worse.

ā€œObviously, heā€™s been shaken by the whole experience as have all the staff, pupils, parents and so on.

ā€œBut I think itā€™s the sense of shock because heā€™s been there for 40 years as teacher, heā€™s never ever seen anything like this.

ā€œI think that hits home to people that it should happen in a place like this.ā€

The south-west Wales school went into lockdown after a ā€œcode redā€ alarm sounded through the PA system, during which students and staff are said to have hidden in classrooms ā€“ with one pupil reportedly vaulting the school fence to get to safety.

The lockdown lasted around four hours between 11.20am and 3.20pm, resulting in a lengthy and anxious wait for parents who were seen tearfully hugging their children after they walked through the gates.

Footage of the incident has been circulating online, with a number of newspapers reporting the contents of one video in which a panicked pupil can be heard shouting about someone getting stabbed.

Mr Campbell said there would be questions asked in the Senedd about security in schools across Wales.

ā€œLetā€™s hope itā€™s a one off, but you just donā€™t know the way the society has changed. We have to ask questions about the way we move forward,ā€ he told BBC Radio Wales.

ā€œWe certainly donā€™t want to go down the route of America but there are parts of the UK where bags are checked every day, thereā€™s metal detectors, as well as random checks by police.

ā€œNone of us want to go down that road but weā€™ve just obviously got to ask questions. What lessons can we learn from this?ā€

All three victims were taken to hospital with stab wounds but Dyfed-Powys Police said their injuries were not life-threatening.

The force also said a knife has been recovered.

Amman Valley School ā€“ a bilingual comprehensive school for pupils aged between 11 and 18 ā€“ will not open on Thursday to allow police to continue their investigation.

It is also known as Ysgol Dyffryn Aman and is maintained by Carmarthenshire County Council and provides education to 1,450 school pupils, in addition to 270 sixth form students.

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