Timeline: How Events Unfolded In London's Latest Attack

LONDON (AP) - Britain suffered its third major extremist attack in three months on Saturday night when three men using a van and knives killed seven people in a busy area of London.

This is how the attack at London Bridge and nearby Borough Market, which also left dozens injured, unfolded:

9:58 p.m., Saturday, June 3: A van entered London Bridge crossing the River Thames from north to south. The van mounted the sidewalk on the bridge and struck pedestrians. It later crashed outside the Barrowboy & Banker pub near stairs leading down to Borough Market. Three men left the vehicle and headed into the market, where they began stabbing people in pubs and restaurants while patrons and workers took cover and tried to help the wounded.

10:07 p.m.: Ambulance services were called to respond to reports of a white van ploughing through pedestrians on London Bridge, arriving within six minutes.

10:08 p.m.: Police were also summoned to the scene. Officers searching for the attackers went through bars and restaurants as staff and customers hid.

10:16 p.m.: Eight minutes after police were first called, three male suspects were shot dead by eight armed officers near the Wheatsheaf pub on Stoney Street. A member of the public is also wounded in the "unprecedented" police gunfire, but not critically injured.

12:25 a.m., Sunday, June 4: Police declare the attacks on the bridge and at the restaurants and pubs as terror attacks.

6 a.m.: London Ambulance Service reports that six people died at the scene, and at least 48 patients were taken to five hospitals overnight. More than 80 medics attended the scene.

9:30 a.m.: Police say the death toll from the attacks stands at seven victims.

1 p.m.: Police say counterterrorism officers raided addresses in Barking, east London, arresting 12 people in connection with the attack.

10:45 p.m.: The SITE intelligence Group, which monitors extremist activity , says the Islamic State militant group issued a statement on its Aamaq news agency claiming IS "fighters" were responsible for the London attack.

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(Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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