Danish police shoot one after Copenhagen ‘terror’ attack

Monday, 16 February 2015 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

A police secures the police headquarters in Copenhagen, February 15, 2015. Danish police said they believed the man shot dead by officers in Copenhagen on Sunday was responsible for two shootings in the city at a freedom of expression event and a synagogue which killed two people and wounded five. REUTERS     Reuters: Danish police shot dead a man in Copenhagen on Sunday during an intensive manhunt after earlier shootings in which two people were killed and five were wounded. The prime minister said on Saturday the first shooting, which bore similarities to an attack in Paris in January on the office of the weekly newspaper Charlie Hebdo, was a terrorist attack. One man died in the first attack, on an arts cafe hosting controversial artist Lars Vilks, and another died in an attack on a synagogue close by. Vilks is a Swede who has been threatened with death for his cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. It was not clear if the two attacks were carried out by the same person or people. Police were unable to apprehend the attacker in both incidents, launching a massive manhunt with helicopters roaring overhead and an array of armoured vehicles on the usually peaceful streets of Copenhagen. By 0500 GMT, police said they had fired shots and later confirmed they killed a man in Norrebro, an area in Copenhagen not far from the sites of the two attacks. They did not confirm any link between the man they shot and the earlier attacks or give further details. Police officials were not available for comment. French ambassador Francois Zimeray attended the cafe event and praised Denmark’s support for freedom of speech following the January attack in Paris on the Charlie Hebdo newspaper that killed a dozen people. Witnesses said that the envoy had barely finished an introduction to the meeting when up to 40 shots rang out, outside the venue, as an attacker tried to shoot inside. Police said they considered Vilks, the main speaker, to have been the target. A 55-year-old man died as a result of that shooting, police said early on Sunday. “We feel certain now that it was a politically motivated attack, and thereby it was a terrorist attack,” Prime Minister HelleThorning-Schmidt told journalists, speaking on Saturday close to the site of the cafe. Hours later, during the night, shots were fired at a synagogue in another part of the city, about a half hour walk away from the cafe. A man was shot in the head, and was later confirmed to have died. Two police officers were wounded.

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