Oman Daily Observer

Uzbek man arrested over Swedish truck attack

SUSPICIOUS DEVICE:

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STOCKHOLM: Swedish police arrested a 39-year-old Uzbek man on suspicion of ramming a hijacked beverage delivery truck into crowds in central Stockholm, killing four people and wounding 15 in what they called a terror crime.

Police were increasing­ly confident they had detained the driver of the truck that ploughed down a busy shopping street and smashed through a store front in the heart of the capital on Friday, but did not name him.

“Nothing points to that we have the wrong person, on the contrary, suspicions have strengthen­ed as the investigat­ion has progressed,” Dan Eliasson, head of Sweden’s national police, told a news conference.

“We still cannot rule out that more people are involved.”

The man had previously figured marginally in intelligen­ce material, but had not been linked to extremists.

“We received intelligen­ce last year, but we did not see any links to extremist circles,” Sapo security police chief Anders Thornberg said.

Eliasson said there were “clear similariti­es” to an attack last month in London in which six people died, including the assailant who drove a hired car into pedestrian­s on a bridge.

Vehicles have also been used as weapons in Nice and Berlin in the past year in attacks claimed by IS.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity for the attack in Sweden, which has so far been largely immune from any major incidents of this kind, and police said they tightened security around the nation.

“I think it was just a matter of time, but still one doesn’t think it will happen,” Cecilia Hansson, a 25 yearold nurse, said. “It’s still unreal when it happens this close.”

Police said they had found a suspicious device in the vehicle but said they did not yet know if it was a homemade bomb, as reported by public broadcaste­r SVT.

SVT said the bomb may have partly exploded, burning the driver, who escaped in the ensuing chaos after mowing through crowds and ramming into the Ahlens department store.

Local authoritie­s in the capital, where flags flew at half mast on buildings including the parliament and royal palace, said that 10 people including a child were still being treated in hospital, with two adults in intensive care.

A gaping hole in the wall of the store showed the force of the impact from the truck, which was removed overnight for examinatio­n by forensics experts, and dozens of people gathered to pay their respects and leave flowers, stunned by the attack.

Crown Princess Victoria was among them, laying a bouquet of red roses. “I feel an enormous sadness, I feel empty,” she told Aftonblade­t TV, urging Swedes to unite in their grief.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven also visited the site and struck a defiant tone. “All of us feel anger over what has happened, I also feel the same anger, but we also need to use that anger for something constructi­ve and go forward,” he said.

“We want — and I am convinced the Swedish people also want — to live a normal life. We are an open, democratic society and that is what we will remain.”

The attack was the latest to hit the Nordic region after shootings in the Danish capital Copenhagen killed three people in 2015 and put the country on high alert and the bombing and shooting in 2011 by far-right extremist Anders Behring Breivik that killed 77 people in Norway.

Although Sweden has not seen a large-scale attack, a failed suicide bombing in December 2010 killed an attacker only a few hundred yards from the site of Friday’s incident.

Swedish police said it was especially difficult to identify “lone wolf ” attackers in an open, Nordic society.

“It is very hard if it is a single individual who is not part of a wider conspiracy or a more organised planning,” Thornberg, head of the Sapo security police, told Swedish radio.

 ?? — AFP ?? Flowers and candles are left at a makeshift memorial near the crime site in central Stockholm on Saturday.
— AFP Flowers and candles are left at a makeshift memorial near the crime site in central Stockholm on Saturday.

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