Iran Daily

Gunman kills three people on Dutch tram

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Dutch police are searching for the man who opened fire inside a tram in the city of Utrecht, killing three people and wounding nine others late Monday morning. Police say they’re investigat­ing a “possible terrorist motive” for the attack.

Utrecht Mayor Jan van Zanen confirmed the three deaths in a video update around 3 p.m. local time, npr.org reported.

Hours after the attack, police released the name and image of a man they want to find in connection with the shooting: Gökmen Tanis, 37, who was born in Turkey. Police warned anyone who sees Tanis not to approach him but instead to contact police.

Details are still emerging about the incident, which took place around 10:45 a.m. local time (5:45 a.m. ET).

Just before the attack, police say, a car was stolen from a location a few blocks south of the intersecti­on where the shooting took place. That car, a red Renault Clio, was later recovered several miles northeast from where it was taken.

The Netherland­s has been shaken by the attack, Prime Minister Mark Rutte said in a televised news conference.

Police say they believe one person carried out the shooting. With that person still on the loose, city officials are warning Utrecht residents to stay away from the area and asking them to be vigilant, stating, “New incidents are not excluded.”

At a briefing about the investigat­ion, police spokesman Bernhard Jens said “one explanatio­n is that the person fled by car,” according to the Associated Press, which adds that Jens “did not rule out the possibilit­y that more than one person was involved” in the attack.

When the shooting occurred, the tram was near the 24 Oktoberple­in transit station — which takes its name from the founding date of the United Nations in 1945.

“Authoritie­s say three trauma helicopter­s have been dispatched along with emergency vehicles to the scene,” Teri Schultz reports for NPR’S Newscast unit.

Shortly after the incident, Utrecht’s mayor issued a statement expressing sympathy for those who were wounded. He also confirmed that police are still looking for the person who is responsibl­e. And he reiterated the police’s statement, saying investigat­ors have not ruled out the possibilit­y of a terrorist attack.

The violence prompted the National Coordinato­r for Counterter­rorism and Security — the Dutch agency also known as the NCTV — to raise the threat level to 5 in Utrecht’s province until at least 6 p.m. local time.

The US State Department issued a travel advisory last September to warn of a possible terrorist attack in the Netherland­s, urging people who visit the country to “exercise increased caution.”

“Terrorists continue plotting possible attacks in the Netherland­s,” the US agency said in September. “Terrorists may attack with little or no warning, targeting tourist locations, transporta­tion hubs” and other public spaces.

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