(Reuters) -
Police shot dead a 22-year-old Danish-born gunman on Sunday after he
killed two people at a Copenhagen synagogue and an event promoting free
speech in actions possibly inspired by an attack on the French satirical
weekly Charlie Hebdo, authorities said. Spy chief Jens Madsen
said the gunman was known to intelligence services prior to the shooting
and probably acted alone. Police said he had a record of violence,
gang-related activities and weapons possession. They did not publish his
name. Two civilians - a
synagogue guard and a film-maker - were killed and five police were
wounded in the two separate attacks in the Danish capital on Saturday. Witnesses
to the Copenhagen attacks said the gunman fired up to 40 shots at a
cafe hosting a free speech event with Swedish artist Lars Vilks, who has
received death threats for depicting the head of the Prophet Mohammad
on a dog. Vilks was unharmed. The gunman then moved on to a nearby synagogue where the guard, protecting a young girl's confirmation, was gunned down. On Sunday, thousands of Danes left a sea of flowers by the city's ornate synagogue. "We
are a small nation and such things don't happen here," 28-year-old
student Frederikke Baastrup said, reflecting a widespread sense of shock
in a country that prides itself on its reputation for safety and social
tolerance. Police
cordoned off several sections in a predominantly immigrant neighborhood
and took away several people for questioning, witnesses said. ON ALERT Danish
authorities have been on alert since Islamist gunmen killed 17 people
in three days of violence in Paris in January that began with an attack
on weekly Charlie Hebdo, long known for its acerbic cartoons on Islam,
other religions and politicians. "Denmark and France
are the same nations, feeling the same sadness but also the same will to
resist, fight and defeat terrorism," French President Francois Hollande
said. "They hit the
same targets, they hit what we are, what we represent, the values of
freedom, the rule of law, that all citizens, whatever their religion,
should be able to enjoy," Hollande said. Madsen said the attacks appear to have been inspired by the January attacks in Paris. But
police who had earlier released a photo of the suspect dressed in a
heavy winter coat and maroon mask, said they did not believe he had
received training in jihadist camps in the Middle East. The
man had two handguns on him when he was killed and the police search
later found an automatic weapon that may have been used in Saturday's
attacks. The gunman's primary target was likely to have been the free speech event with Vilks. Dozens
of bullets were fired in quick succession, probably from an automatic
weapon, according to a recording of the event obtained by Danish TV2. Prime
Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt said the attacks were terrorism but
said this was not the start of a war between the West and Islam. "When
you mercilessly fire deadly bullets at innocent people taking part in a
debate, when you attack the Jewish community, you attack our
democracy," Thorning-Schmidt said outside the synagogue. "We will do
everything possible to protect our Jewish community." Denmark
became a target of violent Islamists 10 years ago after the publication
of cartoons lampooning the Prophet Mohammad, images which led to
sometimes fatal protests in the Muslim world. Many Muslims consider any
representation of the Prophet blasphemous. Vilks stirred controversy himself in 2007 with drawings depicting Mohammad's head on a dog, triggering death threats. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said such attacks would likely continue and said Israel would welcome European Jews who choose to move to there. Witnesses
said French ambassador Francois Zimeray had just finished introducing
the cafe event, entitled "Art, Blasphemy and Freedom of Expression",
when the assailant opened fire. The venue was heavily guarded by police, who fired back, but the attacker nevertheless escaped. Vilks, sheltered on the floor of a cold room at the back of the cafe with one of the event's organizers. "The
rather spare audience got to experience fear and horror - and tragedy. I
can't say it affected me as I was well looked after," Vilks wrote in a
blog post. He has lived
under Swedish police protection since 2010 and two years ago an American
woman was jailed for 10 years in the United States for plotting to kill
him. Like other European
governments, Scandinavian leaders have been increasingly concerned
about the radicalization of young Muslims traveling to Syria and Iraq to fight alongside violent jihadist groups such as Islamic State. Authorities
have also been worried about possible lone gunmen like Anders Behring
Breivik, the anti-immigrant Norwegian who killed 77 people in 2011, most
of them at a youth camp run by Norway's ruling center-left Labour
Party.
Danish police kill 22-year-old suspect after Copenhagen shootings

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