Norway’s killings seen as ‘act of terror’
KONGSBERG, Norway – Norwegian authorities said Thursday the bow-andarrow rampage by a man who killed five people in a small town appeared to be a terrorist act, a shocking attack in a Scandinavian country where violent crime is rare.
Police identified the attacker as Danish citizen Espen Andersen Braathen, 37, who was arrested Wednesday night. They said he used the bow and arrow and possibly other weapons to randomly target people at a supermarket and other locations in Kongsberg, a town of about 26,000 where he lived, before he was seized by police on the street.
Police said they believe he acted alone.
“The whole act appears to be an act of terror,” said Hans Sverre Sjoevold, head of Norway’s domestic intelligence service, known as the PST. “We do not know what the motivation of the perpetrator is. We have to wait for the outcome of the investigation.”
Sjoevold said the suspect was known earlier by the PST, but he declined to elaborate.
Regional Police Chief Ole B. Saeverud described the man as being known as a convert to Islam and said there “earlier had been worries of the man having been radicalized,” but he did not elaborate or say why he was previously flagged or authorities did in response.
Police said four women and one man from ages of 50 to 70 were killed. Three other people were wounded, police said.
Andersen Braathen was being held on preliminary charges and will face formal charges Friday.
Mass killings are rare in low-crime Norway, and the attack immediately drew comparisons with the country’s worst peacetime slaughter a decade ago, when a right-wing domestic extremist killed 77 people with a bomb, a rifle and a pistol.
People have “experienced that their safe local environment suddenly became a dangerous place,” Norwegian King Harald V said. “It shakes us all when horrible things happen near us, when you least expect it, in the middle of everyday life on the open street.”
Newly appointed Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere called the attack “horrific.”
“This is unreal. But the reality is that five people have been killed, many are injured, and many are in shock,” Gahr Stoere told Norwegian broadcaster NRK.