<p>UK police on Monday said they were investigating a knife attack on a woman in a London park, with online footage showing she was wearing a T-shirt with a cartoon from Charlie Hebdo, the French magazine targeted by jihadists.</p>.<p>The 39-year-old woman was treated in hospital for a minor slash injury after the attack on Sunday afternoon at Speakers Corner' in Hyde Park, the Metropolitan Police said.</p>.<p>Footage posted on YouTube showed a man in a hooded top approach a woman holding an umbrella and stab her, apparently several times.</p>.<p>The man then takes off his hood and leaves.</p>.<p>The woman's T-shirt has the Charlie Hebdo logo and a cartoon showing a Muslim man kissing a cartoonist with the slogan "L'amour plus fort que la haine" (love is stronger than hate).</p>.<p>She has blood running down her face and shortly afterwards collapses to the ground.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/charlie-hebdo-office-attacker-radicalised-by-pakistani-groups-965914.html" target="_blank">Read | Charlie Hebdo office attacker 'radicalised by Pakistani groups'</a></strong></p>.<p>Speakers' Corner is a historic place for open-air debate where people are allowed to make speeches on any lawful subject.</p>.<p>Police did not identify the victim by name but social media said she was Hatun Tash, a preacher from a group called DCCI Ministries that says it seeks to preach the Christian Gospel to Muslims.</p>.<p>Detectives said they had recovered a knife at the scene and the victim gave an account of what happened.</p>.<p>"We know that this assault was witnessed by a number of people, many of whom captured it on their phones. I would ask them, if they have not already done so, to contact police," said Detective Superintendent Alex Bingley.</p>.<p>Bingley asked people not to "speculate on the motive for the attack until we have established the full facts".</p>.<p>Twelve members of staff at the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo were gunned down in January 2015 by two brothers who vowed allegiance to Al-Qaeda.</p>.<p>The gunmen said they were taking revenge for the magazine's publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that many Muslims find offensive.</p>
<p>UK police on Monday said they were investigating a knife attack on a woman in a London park, with online footage showing she was wearing a T-shirt with a cartoon from Charlie Hebdo, the French magazine targeted by jihadists.</p>.<p>The 39-year-old woman was treated in hospital for a minor slash injury after the attack on Sunday afternoon at Speakers Corner' in Hyde Park, the Metropolitan Police said.</p>.<p>Footage posted on YouTube showed a man in a hooded top approach a woman holding an umbrella and stab her, apparently several times.</p>.<p>The man then takes off his hood and leaves.</p>.<p>The woman's T-shirt has the Charlie Hebdo logo and a cartoon showing a Muslim man kissing a cartoonist with the slogan "L'amour plus fort que la haine" (love is stronger than hate).</p>.<p>She has blood running down her face and shortly afterwards collapses to the ground.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/charlie-hebdo-office-attacker-radicalised-by-pakistani-groups-965914.html" target="_blank">Read | Charlie Hebdo office attacker 'radicalised by Pakistani groups'</a></strong></p>.<p>Speakers' Corner is a historic place for open-air debate where people are allowed to make speeches on any lawful subject.</p>.<p>Police did not identify the victim by name but social media said she was Hatun Tash, a preacher from a group called DCCI Ministries that says it seeks to preach the Christian Gospel to Muslims.</p>.<p>Detectives said they had recovered a knife at the scene and the victim gave an account of what happened.</p>.<p>"We know that this assault was witnessed by a number of people, many of whom captured it on their phones. I would ask them, if they have not already done so, to contact police," said Detective Superintendent Alex Bingley.</p>.<p>Bingley asked people not to "speculate on the motive for the attack until we have established the full facts".</p>.<p>Twelve members of staff at the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo were gunned down in January 2015 by two brothers who vowed allegiance to Al-Qaeda.</p>.<p>The gunmen said they were taking revenge for the magazine's publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed that many Muslims find offensive.</p>