Bangkok Post

Five die in bow-and-arrow attack

Norway cops probe terror motive

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OSLO: A 37-year-old Danish citizen is suspected of killing five people in a bow-and-arrow attack in the Norwegian town of Kongsberg in a rare incident of mass killing in Norway, police said.

Two people, including an off-duty police officer, were wounded in the Wednesday evening attacks which took place in different locations in the town, 68 kilometres southwest of the capital, Oslo.

“This very serious situation is of course making a deep impression on Kongsberg and those who live here,” district police chief Oeyvind Aas said.

The suspect, who was apprehende­d, was believed to have been acting alone, police said. They said nothing about a possible motive.

Several of the attacks were committed with a bow and arrow, Mr Aas said, though police were also investigat­ing whether other weapons were used.

The death toll was the worst of any attack in Norway since 2011, when farright extremist Anders Behring Breivik killed 77 people, most of them teenagers at a youth camp.

The police said they were giving informatio­n on the man’s nationalit­y after rumours swirled on social media about people not linked to the attacks.

Norway’s incoming prime minister, Jonas Gahr Stoere, who is due to take power today after winning a general election last month, said he had been kept informed by the outgoing government.

“What we’ve learned from Kongsberg bears witness of a gruesome and brutal act,” Mr Stoere said.

The attacks went on for more than half an hour over a “large area” of Kongsberg, including at a Coop Extra grocery store, the Aftenposte­n newspaper cited police as saying.

A woman living near the store said she had heard alarms as she was walking home.

“I saw a group of police officers, including one who held several arrows in his hand,” the woman, Marit Hoefle, told the newspaper.

Investigat­ors are considerin­g whether the attacks amounted to an act of terrorism.

Police were interrogat­ing the suspect and he was cooperatin­g, his defence lawyer said.

“He is cooperatin­g and is giving detailed statements regarding this event,” lawyer Fredrik Neumann said.

Images from one of the crime scenes showed an arrow that appeared to be stuck in the wall of a wood-panelled building.

About 28,000 people live in the Kongsberg municipali­ty.

Following the attacks, the police directorat­e said it had ordered officers nationwide to carry firearms.

Norwegian police are normally unarmed but officers have access to guns when needed.

 ?? AFP ?? A police officer uses a sniffer dog at the scene in Kongsberg, Norway after a man armed with bow killed several people before he was arrested.
AFP A police officer uses a sniffer dog at the scene in Kongsberg, Norway after a man armed with bow killed several people before he was arrested.
 ?? ?? Aas: No comment on motive
Aas: No comment on motive

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