Masood drove
 a rented SUV into pedestrians on Westminster Bridge before smashing it 
into Parliament's gates and rushing onto the grounds, where he stabbed a
 policeman to death before he was shot dead, an attack which lasted just
 82 seconds.
 
U.K Home Secretary Amber Rudd on Sunday
 urged those behind WhatsApp -- and similar apps to make their back end 
encryption accessible to security agencies, a plea that resembled that 
made by the FBI following the San Bernardino terror attack in December 
2015 where they asked Apple to help unlock one of the terrorist's 
iPhones. But such a move will be very unlikely by Whatsapp or other 
social media platforms, as they believe in customer confidentiality and 
privacy.
Home Secretary Amber Rudd said; 
"We
 need to make sure that organizations like WhatsApp — and there are 
plenty of others like that — don't provide a secret place for terrorists
 to communicate with each other," she said.
"This terrorist sent a WhatsApp message and it can't be accessed."
According
 to Rudd, if there is no change in the system, terrorists would be able 
to communicate with each other without fear of being overheard even in 
cases where a legal warrant has been obtained.
Deputy
 Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu revealed British security officials 
may never be possible to fully determine Masood's motives.
"That understanding may have died with him," Basu said Saturday night as police appealed for people who knew Masood or saw him to contact investigators.
 "Even
 if he acted alone in the preparation, we need to establish with 
absolute clarity why he did these unspeakable acts, to bring reassurance
 to Londoners."


 
 
 
 
 
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