Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sweden arrests suspected driver of Stockholm terrorist crime

-

STOCKHOLM, April8 (AFP) - Flags flew at half-mast across Stockholm on Saturday as the city woke in mourning, a day after a truck attack that killed four as police said they had the suspected driver in custody.

A stolen beer truck ploughed into a crowd of people at the corner of the bustling Ahlens department store and the pedestrian street Drottningg­atan on Friday afternoon, above ground from Stockholm's central subway station. It was the latest in a string of similar assaults with vehicles in Europe, including in London, Berlin and the southern French city of Nice, all claimed by the so-called Islamic State (IS).

No one has claimed responsibi­lity for the Stockholm attack, the third in Europe in two weeks after those in London and Saint Petersburg. Fifteen people were injured in the Stockholm attack, nine of whom remained in hospital on Saturday.

Prime Minister Stefan Lofven said he had strengthen­ed the country's border controls, as flags flew at half-mast at parliament, the royal palace, the government offices, and City Hall.

“Terrorists want us to be afraid, want us to change our behaviour, want us to not live our lives normally, but that is what we're going to do. So terrorists can never defeat Sweden, never,” Lofven said.

Swedish police said early Saturday that a man arrested on “suspicion of a terrorist crime” was likely the truck driver. “We suspect that the man who was arrested is the perpetrato­r,” Stockholm police spokesman Lars Bystrom told AFP.

The man was arrested “on suspicion of a terrorist crime through murder,” Karin Rosander, spokeswoma­n at the Swedish Prosecutio­n Authority, said. The man was detained on Friday in Marsta, a suburb north of Stockholm. According to several media outlets, he is a 39-year-old of Uzbek origin and an IS supporter.

Prosecutor­s did not disclose his identity, but police said his appearance “matched the descriptio­n” of a photo they released of a suspect wearing a dark hoodie and military green jacket.

“The Jihadist threat has long been minimised,” Swedish daily Expressen wrote on Saturday, though there was no official confirmati­on that police were investigat­ing that possibilit­y.

Witnesses described scenes of terror and panic on Friday. “A massive truck starts driving ... and mangles everything and just drives over exactly everything,” eyewitness Rikard Gauffin told AFP. “It was so terrible and there were bodies lying everywhere... it was really terrifying,” he added.

Passerby Hasan Sidi told Aftonblade­t he saw two elderly women lying on the ground. He said people at the scene urged him to help one of the women who was “bleeding to death”. “One of them died... I don't know if the other one made it,” Sidi said. The truck was towed away in the early hours of Saturday.

Police cars and ambulances rapidly flooded the scene after the attack, as central streets and squares were blocked off amid fears that another attack could be imminent.

An attack on Stockholm was just a matter of time, the head of the Centre for Asymmetric Threat Studies at the Swedish National Defence College, Magnus Ranstorp, told AFP.

 ??  ?? Emergency services and police work at the scene where a truck crashed into the Ahlens department store at Drottningg­atan in central Stockholm, April 7, 2017. AFP PHOTO
Emergency services and police work at the scene where a truck crashed into the Ahlens department store at Drottningg­atan in central Stockholm, April 7, 2017. AFP PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka