Dayton Daily News

After attack on mosque, body found at home

- Henrik Pryser Libell ©2019 The New York Times

— A worshipper OSLO, NORWAY thwarted an attack on a mosque Saturday by a young man wearing a helmet and body armor, according to Norwegian authoritie­s and a witness. Hours later, police said they found a dead woman at a home linked to the assailant.

Police described the suspect as a young white man who appeared to have acted alone. He was arrested and charged with attempted murder in connection with the mosque attack near the capital, Oslo, and later with murder in connection with the dead body.

When police made their way into a home where the suspect once lived, they found the body of a young woman.

“He is indicted for murder,” said Rune Skjold, a police spokesman.

During the mosque attack, the suspect was overpowere­d by a 75-year-old member of the congregati­on who sustained slight injuries, said Irfan Mushtaq, a former director of the al-Noor Islamic Centre mosque and a board member who witnessed it.

“The man carried two shotgun-like weapons and a pistol,” and was wearing body armor, a helmet and black clothes, Mushtaq told Norwegian television TV2. “He broke through a glass door and fired shots.”

Only three people were in the mosque at the time, about 4 p.m. local time. But if he had arrived earlier during prayers, the attacker could have hurt many more people, he said.

Police said they were aware of online posts linked to the suspect, whose name has not been released. About two hours before the attack, a post appeared on 8chan, the message board that had hosted the alleged manifesto of the man accused of the El Paso, Texas, shooting. The post raised questions of whether it could have been written by the shooting suspect.

“Well cobblers it’s my time,” the post began in English, ending with the Norwegian phrase “valhall venter” or “heaven awaits.”

Skjold said authoritie­s had no evidence that the suspect belonged to any kind of network of extremists but were prepared for the possibilit­y that the attack was terror related. He told public broadcaste­r NRK the suspect had been known to police, without elaboratin­g.

After the attack, the police special unit and bomb detecting unit went to the address connected to the suspect, the newspaper VG reported.

The local newspaper Budstikka reported in March that the mosque had taken new security measures like introducin­g ID cards to enter after attacks that killed more than 50 people at two New Zealand mosques in March.

In 2011, Anders Behring Breivik killed eight people with a bomb at a government building in central Oslo and then fatally shot 69 people at a summer camp on the island of Utoya. He said he had been on a “martyr operation” to stop a Muslim invasion of Europe.

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