Kuwait Times

One hurt in Norway mosque shooting, suspect arrested

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OSLO: A gunman armed with multiple weapons went on a shooting spree in a mosque in a suburb of the Norwegian capital Oslo yesterday, injuring one worshipper before being arrested, police and witnesses said. The head of the mosque described the assailant as white and said he was wearing a helmet and a uniform. “One person is shot. The severity of that person’s injuries is unknown. One suspect is arrested. The police are working at the location,” Oslo police said on Twitter.

The shooting occurred at the Al-Noor Islamic centre in the town of Baerum, an Oslo suburb. Police said there was no indication that more people were involved. They said they had no informatio­n about the suspect, other than he was described as “white”. “One of our members has been shot by a white man with a helmet and uniform,” Irfan Mushtaq, head of the mosque, told local newspaper Budstikka.

He later told broadcaste­r TV2 that the man had carried multiple weapons. “An ethnically Norwegian man with a shotgun and pistols entered the mosque and broke glass windows. He started shooting around him,” Mushtaq said.

‘Suspect subdued’

Public broadcaste­r NRK reported that police had found multiple weapons inside the mosque, and that someone in the building had managed to subdue the suspect before police arrived on the scene. The Norwegian Police Security Service (PST) said it was monitoring the situation. “We’re following the events and are continuing­ly evaluating. It’s to early to draw any conclusion­s,” Martin Bernsen, informatio­n director at PST, told NRK.

There has been recent spate of white nationalis­t attacks in the West, including in the United States and in New Zealand where 51 Muslim worshipper­s were killed in March in shootings at two mosques in the city of Christchur­ch. The suspect in the Christchur­ch killings wrote a hate-filled manifesto in which he said he was influenced by far-right ideologues including Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik. Breivik, who said he was motivated by his hatred of multicultu­ralism, killed 77 people in gun and bomb attacks in Norway in July 2011, many of them teenagers. — AFP

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