Santa Fe New Mexican

Finland hit by first act of terrorism, police say

Two people killed, eight others wounded by Moroccan man on stabbing rampage

- By Isaac Stanley-Becker

BERLIN — Authoritie­s in Finland said Saturday they were investigat­ing a fatal stabbing attack in a southweste­rn city as terrorism.

Two people were killed and eight others wounded Friday when an 18-year-old Moroccan man went on a stabbing rampage, police said. He was shot in the leg by police and was being treated in intensive care.

The attack unfolded in Turku, about 100 miles west of Helsinki, jolting a continent still learning the full extent of a terrorist strike targeting Spain, where police were trying to piece together details of two deadly vehicular assaults and an explosion at a house that police said had been used by the attackers.

The Islamic State claimed links to the attacks in Spain, the nation’s worst in more than a decade. Police in Finland initially said they did not believe the stabbing was related to terrorism. However, Finland’s National Bureau of Investigat­ion took control of the case and was investigat­ing with the assistance of Finnish security services.

Saying new informatio­n had emerged overnight, police in southwest Finland said Saturday the stabbings were being investigat­ed as murders with “terrorist intent.” The investigat­ive bureau said it had reason to believe the attack was planned in advance but did not offer further details.

Security services said it was the first suspected terrorist attack in Finland.

Police said the suspect had arrived in the country as an asylum seeker last year. Four other suspects, also Moroccan citizens, were arrested in connection with the stabbings, police said, and there was an internatio­nal search warrant for a sixth suspect. The two people who died of stabbing wounds were Finnish women, police said.

Security was tightened across the country, including at airports and train stations. National Police Commission­er Seppo Kolehmaine­n warned civilians that they might see armed security personnel in the streets.

A video circulated Friday on Twitter in which users said a man could be heard crying “Allahu akbar,” but others replied saying that the shouts were Finnish for “watch out.” An eyewitness told Turun Sanomat, a Turku-based newspaper, that she was buying potatoes in the market square when she saw people running and screaming. Among the victims, she said, was a woman with a small child.

 ?? VESA MOILANEN/LEHTIKUVA VIA AP ?? A woman places a memorial candle Friday evening at the Market Square for the victims of stabbings in Turku, Finland.
VESA MOILANEN/LEHTIKUVA VIA AP A woman places a memorial candle Friday evening at the Market Square for the victims of stabbings in Turku, Finland.

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