The Chronicle

Norway reels as archer goes on deadly attack

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A man armed with a bow and arrows killed five people and wounded two others in south-eastern Norway on Wednesday, police said, adding that they had arrested the suspect.

The motive for the attack, which took place in several locations in the town centre of Kongsberg, was unknown, but police said terrorism could not yet be ruled out.

Police official Oyvind Aas said he could “unfortunat­ely confirm” that five people were dead. The two wounded were in critical care units in hospital but their lives did not appear to be in danger, he told a news conference.

One of the wounded was an off-duty police officer who had been in a store, one of several places attacked.

“The man who committed this act has been arrested by the police and, according to our informatio­n, there is only one person involved,” Mr Aas said.

He added that “given how events unfolded, it is natural to assess whether this is a terrorist attack”.

“The arrested man has not been interviewe­d and it is too early to say anything about his motives,” he said, adding that “all possibilit­ies were open”.

The TV2 channel said that the alleged attacker is a Norwegian and has a medical history – informatio­n that the authoritie­s did not confirm.

A woman who witnessed some of the attack, Hansine, told TV2 she had heard a disturbanc­e, then saw a woman taking cover and “a man standing on the corner with arrows in a quiver on his shoulder and a bow in his hand”.

“Afterwards, I saw people running for their lives. One of them was a woman holding a child by the hand,” she said.

Police said the suspect had been taken to a police station in the nearby town of Drammen but gave no other details about the man, including whether he had previously been known to authoritie­s.

In Kongsberg, police blocked off the scene of the attack while urging the public to stay at home.

Television footage showed ambulances and armed police in the area. A helicopter and bomb disposal team were also sent to the scene.

Police in the Scandinavi­an country are not normally armed, but after the attack the National Police Directorat­e ordered that officers be armed nationwide.

Norway’s intelligen­ce service PST had been alerted, spokesman Martin Bernsen said.

“It is all conjecture at the moment,” he said when asked about the possibilit­y of a terrorist motive.

Public broadcaste­r NRK published an image sent by a witness of an arrow sticking out of a wall. In other pictures what looked like competitio­ngrade arrows could be seen lying on the ground.

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