Turku attack: asylum-seeker targeted women in terror stabbing

From the Weekend Australian

Finnish police say a Moroccan asylum seeker deliberately targeted women in a stabbing spree that left two dead and is being investigated as the country’s first terror attack.

Police shot and wounded the knife-wielding suspect, detaining him minutes after Friday’s rampage at a busy market square in Turku, southwestern Finland.

Eight other people were injured, among them six women, police said. Finland raised its emergency readiness after the attack, increasing security at airports and train stations and putting more officers on the streets.

“We think that the attacker especially targeted women, and the men were wounded after coming to their defence,” superintendent Christa Granroth of Finland’s National Bureau of Investigation told reporters.

The stabbings were initially probed as murders but further information received meant “the offences now include murders with terrorist intent,” police said in a statement. Officers identified the main suspect as a 18-year-old Moroccan citizen who arrived in Finland in early 2016 and sought asylum. His name was not disclosed, nor his motive known.

“We tried to talk with the attacker in hospital but he didn’t want to speak,” Granroth said

“Whether or not there is a connection to IS will be one of the main focuses of the investigation,” Finnish intelligence agency SUPO director Antti Pelttari told reporters. “The suspect’s profile is similar to that of several other recent radical Islamist terror attacks that have taken place in Europe.”

Police said they had issued an international arrest warrant for another person outside Finland, who is believed to be dangerous.

Police were also probing whether there was a link to the vehicle attacks in Barcelona and another Spanish seaside resort that killed 14 people and wounded around 100 others. Most of the suspects in those attacks were also Moroccan citizens. “Of course this is something we are going to investigate,” Granroth said

In June, SUPO raised Finland’s terror threat level by a notch, from “low” to “elevated”, the second on a four-tier scale. It said at the time that it saw an increased risk of an attack committed by IS, noting that foreign fighters from Finland had “gained significant positions within IS in particular and have an extensive network of relations in the organisation.”

Experts were cautious about drawing any links between the attack and Islamist extremism. “But if it is related, this is pretty much a continuation of the easy-to-use blatant attacks that Europe has seen,” terrorism researcher Leena Malkki from the University of Helsinki told public broadcaster YLE.

A demonstration in memory of the victims was held at the market square where the attack took place, organised by Iraqis, Turks and Syrians. An anti-immigration group, Finland First, also demonstrated at the scene, but police kept apart the two groups, who numbered around 300. No violence was reported.

Finland, with 5.5 million inhabitants, saw a record 32,500 migrants seek asylum in 2015.

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