Photo: Reuters
The Danish police: Copenhagen striker killed a 22-year-old Dane
The man was known to police because of his prior criminal activity and possession of weapons – clarified in a statement. Police identified the man, but did not disclose his identity.
However, according to recent media reports, the Danish striker is Omar El -Hussein. The man – as reported by the newspaper “Ekstra Bladet” – two weeks before the terrorist attacks in Copenhagen was released from prison, where he was serving a sentence for assault.
Yesterday, police in the online message published photos of the alleged killer; He was wearing a dark jacket and a cap or hood burgundy. The message stated that sought is “a man at the age of 25-30 years, height about 185 cm, sportiness and beauty of Arabic (…) with straight hair.”
In the two shootings in Copenhagen – in front of a cafe, where there was a meeting organized by Lars Vilks, the Swedish author of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, and near the synagogue – Two people were killed and five were injured.
Vilksowi repeatedly threatened with death for his satirical drawings from 2007, showing a dog with the head of Muhammad . The meeting was “Art, blasphemy and freedom of expression” also participated in the French Ambassador François Zimeray Denmark; either nothing happened.
Another shooting took place in the night from Saturday to Sunday near the synagogue. According to the Jewish community was shot in the head one of the bodyguards of the synagogue, which lasted religious ceremonies.
Attacks Danish capital condemned many personalities in the country and around the world, including the Queen of Denmark Margrethe II, the country’s Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt, Prime Ministers of Great Britain, David Cameron, Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and European Council President Donald Tusk.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called on to defend freedom of expression and tolerance. “There is no place in today’s world for anti-Semitism, or other forms of discrimination based on race, ethnicity, or religion” – said Ban.
President Francois Hollande, któryw Sunday visited the Danish Embassy in Paris, pointed out that in Copenhagen were attacked, “the same goals,” which in the French capital at the beginning of January. Terrorists – he said Hollande – “are determined to attack what we are, what we represent – the values of freedom, rights, protection of every citizen irrespective of religion.”
In the French capital, hundreds of people gathered Sunday afternoon in front of the Embassy of Denmark in Paris, in solidarity with the Danes. Many demonstrators held the posters with the slogan “Jer Dansk er”, “Je suis Danois” (I’m a Dane), “I’m Charlie, I’m a cop, I’m a Jew, I am a Dane.” Under the slogan “I’m Charlie” manifestos in January in France after the attacks on the editors of the satirical weekly “Charlie Hebdo”.
The jihadist attacks in Paris on January 7-9, killed 17 people. Bombings in Paris were the most tragic consequences of attacks in France for decades, and shaken public opinion in Europe and the world. January 7 in an attack on the editorial staff of the weekly “Charlie Hebdo”, known for its publication of cartoons mocking, among others, Mohammed and other religious brothers and Cherif Said Kouachi shot 12 people, including the main cartoonists letter. A day later associated with Amedy Coulibaly attackers killed a police officer in Paris, and January 9 took hostages in a kosher food shop, killing four people.
Danish police: Copenhagen striker killed a 22-year-old Dane – Onet.pl
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