Will JeffordEast Midlands

PA Media
Detectives said they were continuing to question a 36-year-old Derby man
Two people have been discharged from hospital after they were among seven people hit by a car in Derby city centre.
Their discharge comes as detectives have been given more time to question a man arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after the car injured the group in Friar Gate at about 21:30 GMT on Saturday.
Claire Ward, mayor of the East Midlands, has called for local communities and agencies to do "all we can" to support people affected, adding that two people have now been released from hospital.
Derbyshire Police said on Monday it was continuing to question a 36-year-old Derby man, who was originally from India, after being given more time to hold him in custody.

Jacob King/PA Wire
Forensic officers at the scene on Sunday
Counter-terrorism police have joined the investigation but the Derbyshire force said this was "common practice for an incident of this nature" and officers were "keeping an open mind about the potential motives".
The suspect is also being held on suspicion of causing serious injury through dangerous driving, inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent and dangerous driving.
The incident is not currently being treated as terrorism and police said there was no ongoing risk to the public.
Speaking on Radio 4 on Monday morning, Ward said two of the seven people who suffered serious but not life-threatening injuries have been released to recover at home with "hopefully more soon".
"This is a serious but isolated incident. I know that for those not just involved who were injured on the evening, but who were around the city centre and had first-hand experience of what happened, this will be a really frightening time.
"The city itself, and all our agencies, will want to do all it can to support people at this difficult time.
"We know the repercussions of violent acts like this don't end just in that moment.
"There will be real upset and trauma for many people who witnessed what happened on the night as well, of course, as those victims who were directly impacted, but we understand that there were no fatalities and that two people have already been discharged from hospital and more we hope, soon."

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Police said the incident was not currently being treated as terrorism
Speaking on BBC Radio Derby on Monday, Marc O'Dwyer, owner of O'Dwyers bar on Friar Gate, said the area was "eerie" when he went there on Sunday morning.
"It was very surreal to be there," he said.
"It's usually a very busy lively area with businesses preparing to open for Sunday trade.
"It just felt very different. It was a lot quieter - very eerie.
"It was just a bit of a shock seeing it like that and it just brought home what happened and the seriousness of it."
CCTV footage appears to show car involved in Derby incident
A police cordon remained in place in Friar Gate until Sunday afternoon, while forensic investigations took place.
Inside the cordon, debris, including shoes and clothing, littered the road and forensic officers in white suits were walking along the street taking pictures.
By Monday morning, the area, which is mostly populated by restaurants and bars, had returned to normal.
Baggy Shanker, MP for Derby South, said he found the incident "deeply shocking".
"It's shaken a lot of people," he said.
"It's just something we never expect here in Derby.
"My immediate thoughts were around the victims, and all those people that would have seen this and witnessed it, and their families who must have been worried at that time.
"It would have been shocking and scary for everybody involved who were there at that time."

3 hours ago
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