Taylor Swift will return to the stage in London on Thursday to end the European leg of her Eras tour, a week after her Vienna concerts were canceled due to a suicide attack plot.
Around 90,000 fans will again pack London’s Wembley Stadium for the first date in the five-day run, with additional ticket checks and restrictions in place.
Last week, all three of the American megastar’s shows in the Austrian capital were canceled following the discovery of an Islamic State-inspired plan to launch an attack using explosives and knives.
Three alleged Islamic State sympathizers have been arrested on charges of plotting the atrocity, which was thwarted with the help of US intelligence.
London’s Metropolitan Police has said there was “nothing to indicate that the matters being investigated by the Austrian authorities will have an impact on upcoming events here in London”.
The force was working “closely with venue security teams and other partners to ensure there are appropriate security and policing plans in place”, a police spokesperson said in a statement.
Fans have been warned on Wembley’s website to expect “additional ticket checks” around the stadium.
Swift’s return to the British capital, following three sold-out shows in June, also comes two weeks after three young girls were killed in a stabbing at a dance class themed around the pop star’s music in northwest England.
Following the knife attack, Swift said she was “completely in shock” and at a “complete loss for how to ever convey my sympathies to these families”.
She has not yet commented on the decision to cancel the Vienna shows.
London’s mayor Sadiq Khan told Sky News that the city was “going to carry on working closely with police, ensuring that the Taylor Swift concerts can take place in London safely”.
“We have a huge amount of experience in policing these events, we’re never complacent, many lessons were learned after the awful Manchester Arena attack,” Khan added.
He was referring to the 2017 bombing at an Ariana Grande concert that killed 22 people, some of them children.
Fans without tickets will also not be allowed to “tay-gate” the event – the practice of Swift fans standing outside the venue during the live show to hear the music.
The stadium’s website says that “no one is allowed to stand outside any entrance or… at the front of the stadium” and “non-ticket holders will be moved on”.
While the practice was not permitted at her June concerts there, some fans still managed to gather outside Wembley.
After two performances in Madrid at the end of July, Swift noted around 50,000 “people came out and listened to the show” from a nearby hillside on both nights, “participating in the show from afar”. AFP