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Suspect charged after 5 killed in bow and arrow attack in Norway, police say

A 37-year-old man has been arrested and charged after five people were killed and two injured in a bow and arrow attack in the Norwegian town of Kongsberg on Wednesday.

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Vasco Cotovio, James Frater
and
Lianne Kolirin, CNN
CNN — A 37-year-old man has been arrested and charged after five people were killed and two injured in a bow and arrow attack in the Norwegian town of Kongsberg on Wednesday.

The suspect is a Danish citizen who lives in the town, police said in a statement early Thursday morning. The suspect, who has not been named by police, was arrested on Wednesday afternoon and transported to the nearby city of Drammen.

Police have not disclosed what charges the suspect is facing. Authorities released the latest statement to counter what they said were discussions on social media relating to other possible perpetrators not linked to the incident, the statement said.

The perpetrator is believed to have acted alone, police said.

Speaking to media after the attack, Oyvind Aas, police chief of the county seat Drammen, said authorities had not ruled out the possibility of a terror attack. "From the course of events, it is natural to consider whether this is an act of terrorism," he said.

However, "the apprehended person has not been questioned, and it is therefore too early to say anything about this and what was the person's motivation."

The suspect moved across a "large area" in the course of the attack and was apprehended at 6:47 p.m. local time, a police statement said.

Speaking at a news conference in Oslo, the capital, Erna Solberg, the country's outgoing Prime Minister, described the developments in Kongsberg as "gruesome" and promised that "all necessary resources" are being deployed.

"The perpetrator has carried out horrific acts against several people. It is a very dramatic situation that has hit Kongsberg society hard, and the events shake us all," she said.

The attack comes on the eve of a new government after last month's parliamentary elections unseated the long-ruling Conservative party. Labour leader Jonas Gahr Store is due to assume the role of Prime Minister on Thursday.

In a Facebook post, Store described the attack as a "cruel and brutal act."

"My thoughts and deepest sympathy now go to those affected, their families, and to the police, health personnel and aid workers who are now working full time to provide an overview and assist those who need help."

According to Aas, one of the injured is an off-duty policeman who was in a store.

"The injured have been taken to hospital for treatment. The Kongsberg municipality has been notified and has set up crisis teams to assist and follow up with those who need it," he said.

Kongsberg is located 85 kilometers (about 53 miles) west of Oslo.

Police in country are now temporarily armed

Local police began receiving emergency calls from central Kongsberg at 6:13 p.m. local time, according to a statement by the southeastern police district.

The calls reported a person walking around with "what was supposedly a bow and arrow."

Shots were fired by police during the arrest, said Aas.

"It took some time from the time our first patrol was on the scene until he was arrested. We will return to a more detailed description of the course of events when we have a better overview of what happened," he said.

Police across the country have now been given the rare order to carry firearms as a precaution.

"Due to the serious incident in Kongsberg where several people were killed and injured tonight, the police in Norway are temporarily armed," the Norwegian Police directorate said in a statement on Wednesday.

"This is an additional emergency measure," the statement added. "The police currently have no concrete indications that there is a change in the threat level in the country."

Under Norwegian law, officers typically must have prior approval to carry firearms.

The attack comes just over a decade since Norway's worst terrorist attack.

In July 2011, Norwegian far-right extremist Anders Behring Brevik killed 77 people, many of them teenagers, in a bomb attack and gun rampage. He was sentenced to 21 years in prison, the maximum possible term.

In August 2019, another man stormed an Oslo mosque armed with guns before being overpowered. That year, the country's intelligence service reported that right-wing terrorism was on the rise globally, and warned that the country would likely be targeted in the near future.

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