The investigation found that there wasn't any security threat. (File Photo)
London:
Parts of the House of Lords, Britain's upper house of parliament, were briefly locked down today after police were called to reports of a suspect package, officials said.
The security alert, reportedly sparked by a letter sent to a peer containing white powder, lasted for an hour and a half before police declared the incident over.
"The incident has been stood down. It was a suspicious package that had been delivered to the Houses of Parliament," a spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Police told AFP.
"There are no reports of any injuries or illnesses."
A Lords spokesman had told news agency AFP earlier that parts of the building, including the car park and terrace overlooking the River Thames, were closed "due to a potential security issue that is being investigated".
He later said: "It's over. The investigation found that there wasn't any security threat and so the closed areas were re-opened."
Matt Chorley, a reporter for The Times newspaper who was on the terrace at the time, had tweeted that police were investigating a "chemical incident".
"Letter to a peer being analysed by police over white powder in envelope," he said. Neither police nor the House of Lords would immediately confirm his account.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
The security alert, reportedly sparked by a letter sent to a peer containing white powder, lasted for an hour and a half before police declared the incident over.
"The incident has been stood down. It was a suspicious package that had been delivered to the Houses of Parliament," a spokeswoman for the Metropolitan Police told AFP.
"There are no reports of any injuries or illnesses."
A Lords spokesman had told news agency AFP earlier that parts of the building, including the car park and terrace overlooking the River Thames, were closed "due to a potential security issue that is being investigated".
He later said: "It's over. The investigation found that there wasn't any security threat and so the closed areas were re-opened."
Matt Chorley, a reporter for The Times newspaper who was on the terrace at the time, had tweeted that police were investigating a "chemical incident".
"Letter to a peer being analysed by police over white powder in envelope," he said. Neither police nor the House of Lords would immediately confirm his account.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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