SYDNEY -- Australian police were investigating Friday whether there was any terrorism-related motive behind the car ramming attack on Melbourne pedestrians that left 12 people in a hospital, three of them in critical condition.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull condemned the "despicable and cowardly act." Nine of the 19 people originally injured Thursday were foreigners.
Victoria state police acting chief commissioner Shane Patton said Thursday night early indications were the driver of the car, a 32-year-old Australian citizen of Afghan descent with a history of drug abuse and mental-health issues, was not motivated by terrorism. He said the ramming was being treated as a "singular" incident.
On Friday morning, however, Patton said the man had made several utterances while under police guard in a hospital Thursday night, including mentioning poor treatment of Muslims, and police were still exploring terrorism as a possible motive.
"He made some utterances in respect to a number of matters," Patton told Australia's Channel Nine television network. "He spoke of dreams and voices but also attributed some of his activities as well due to the mistreatment of Muslims."
Asked whether there were links to terrorism, he said: "That's certainly one area we're exploring in respect to motivation."
But he added: "We haven't identified any extremist links with this man. We haven't identified him linked to any groups. We haven't identified anyone inciting him to do any actions, or any prior extremist activities prior to those utterances last night."
Seven of the 19 people admitted to the hospital were discharged overnight. Melbourne media reported three patients remained in critical condition, including an 83-year-old man, and a 4-year-old boy's condition had improved from critical to stable.
Police said nine foreigners were among the injured, including from South Korea, China, Italy, India, Venezuela, Ireland and New Zealand.
"Our consular officials are working hard to get in touch with their families and make sure they're aware of what's happened to their loved ones," Turnbull said at a news conference Friday.
Turnbull also reiterated "no terrorism link has been identified" but "nothing should be ruled out."
"This was a despicable and cowardly act," Turnbull said. "But I want to reassure Australians that this is an isolated incident. We should continue to go about our daily lives the way we always do."
Turnbull said the man had come to Australia as a refugee, "through normal refugee programs, not people smugglers."
"He has a history of serious mental illness and drug abuse. He has no known links to any political issues or to extremist groups, and therefore the position I'm advised of is that no terrorism link has been identified at this stage," Turnbull said.
In horrific scenes around 4:45 p.m. Thursday, the man drove a white SUV through a red light and speeded up into pedestrians crossing central Melbourne's busy Flinders Street before crashing into a traffic barrier.
Patton said the man would undergo psychiatric assessment, with police hoping to formally interview him this afternoon.
The driver is known to police following a 2010 minor assault matter.
Police said a second man, aged 24, who was arrested after being seen filming the incident and found to have three knives in his possession, had been released. He's expected to be charged with drugs and weapons possession but the alleged offenses are not linked to the car ramming.
Patton reassured the public hundreds more police would be on the streets over Christmas and New Year.
It is the second time this year that Melbourne, regularly ranked one of the world's most livable cities, has been traumatized by a car attack.
In January, six people were killed and more than 30 were injured when a car was driven up a footpath in Bourke Street, near Thursday's incident. Police arrested the driver, who was known to police for a history of illicit drug use, family violence and mental health problems.
Police said the case was not terrorism-related.
There have been a number of car attacks in other parts of the world in recent years, many of them linked to terrorism.
In October, a man drove a truck down a New York City bicycle path, killing eight people. The driver is accused of providing material support to the Islamic State group among other charges, including murder.
In an August attack, 13 people were killed and more than 100 were wounded when a vehicle rammed into pedestrians on a walking street in Barcelona. London has seen three such attacks this year, two linked to Islamic extremists and another seen as a reprisal attack outside a mosque, killing 13 people altogether.
A vehicle attack on a shopping street in Stockholm in April killed five people, while an attack on a Christmas market in Berlin last December killed 12.
The deadliest such attack in recent years took place in Nice, France, in July 2016 when a man drove a refrigerated truck weighing about 20 tons into a crowd, killing 86 people.
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