Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Explosion hits Dutch coronaviru­s testing center: police

Officials said the explosion appeared to be intentiona­l. Several windows were shattered, but no injuries were reported in the early-morning blast.

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Dutch police on Wednesday said a coronaviru­s testing location in a town north of Amsterdam appeared to have been intentiona­lly targeted, after an explosion went off early in the morning before the site had opened.

The blast in the town of Bovenkarsp­el, about 50 kilometers (31 miles) outside of Amsterdam, shattered windows but did not cause any injuries, police said, adding that they had cordoned off the area to investigat­e.

The explosive "must have been placed" there, police spokesman Menno Hartenberg told Reuters, adding that "something metal" had caused the blast.

Blast wouldn't 'happen by accident'

"We don't know yet exactly what exploded, the explosives experts must first investigat­e," Hartenberg said. "What we're saying is that something like that doesn't just happen by accident, it has to be laid."

Police reported five shattered windows, after the blast took place at around 7 a.m. local time (0600 GMT/UTC). There was only one guard present at the time of the blast, and so far, officers have not identified any leads on the culprit.

A bomb squad was sent to determine whether any explosive material remained at the scene, public television network NOS reported.

Wednesday marks the first day in several months in which lockdown measures have been slightly eased, with hairdresse­rs reopening and non-essential stores allowed to accept a small number of visitors by appointmen­t. A night-time curfew from 9 p.m. to 4:30 a.m. remains in place.

Tensions high over restrictio­ns

In January, a testing center in the community of Urk, which is also slightly north of Amsterdam, was set on fire during a protest against coronaviru­s measures. That blaze marked the start of several nights of rioting over restrictio­ns and a curfew, in some of the most violent protests the country has seen in decades.

A court last week ordered the government to immediatel­y lift the nationwide curfew, ruling that the government had wrongly used emergency powers to bring it into force.

Testing and vaccinatio­n centers have routinely been targeted, as a movement to counter the measures in place grows. In January, a man was arrested in Wales after a package was sent to a vaccinatio­n production site, forcing a partial evacuation.

According to a report published on Tuesday by the Safeguardi­ng Health In Conflict Coalition, frontline health care workers and facilities were subjected to more than 1,100 acts of violence worldwide in 2020.

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