A lone gunman shot dead three women, a
local official and two journalists, in an attack in a small town in
Finland, a country with one of the highest rates of gun ownership in the
world.
Police said on Sunday they believed the
23-year-old suspect, who was swiftly arrested after the night-time
shooting on Saturday, acted alone and initial indications were that
there was no political or extremist motive.
The attack took place as the women were
leaving a restaurant in the southeastern lakeside town of Imatra near
the Russian border, and police said they may have been targeted at
random.
Investigators identified the victims as
the head of the municipal council and two local reporters for the
Uutisvuoksi newspaper, the STT news agency said.
A police statement said the women had
died at the scene after being shot at close range, sustaining gunshot
wounds to the head or torso.
The suspect, a local man, did not put up any resistance to his arrest and the weapon was found in the boot of his car.
The gun belonged to an unidentified
person who had a hunting licence, police said, indicating that the
inquiry would seek to establish how it was in the suspect’s possession.
Finland enjoys relatively low crime
rates compared to other European nations but, with many Finns keen
hunters, it has one of the biggest gun ownership rates in the world.
– Town in shock –
The violence shocked Imatra, a small
town of 27,500 people in southeastern Finland which lies just a few
kilometres (miles) from the Russian border.
Outside the restaurant where the
shooting took place several makeshift memorials were set up with dozens
of candles and other items including a rag doll in a woolly hat.
In a posting on its website, the town council said it had set up a counselling facility for residents affected by the bloodshed.
The suspect, who already has a record for violence, was interrogated by police on Sunday but his motive remained unclear.
“Nothing demonstrates that he came
(specifically) to kill these three women,” Saku Tielinen, head of the
investigation, told a news conference.
There was no initial indication that the
triple murder was “linked to political issues or extremism”, police
said, adding that they were not looking for any other suspects.
Imatra mayor Pertti Lintunen confirmed
to STT that Tiina Wilen-Jappinen, the local council’s Social-Democrat
leader who was in her early 50s, was among the victims.
The names of the two journalists, one of whom was of a similar age while the second was in her mid-30s, were not released.
“I’m very shocked. This is incomprehensible and it shouldn’t happen. Something like this is inexplicable,” said Lintunen.
Finland has seen several deadly shootings over the past decade, all by young men.
Figures in the Small Arms Survey,
carried out by the Graduate Institute of International and Development
Studies in Geneva, found Finland to be fourth in the civilian
gun-ownership ranks, behind the United States, Yemen and Switzerland.
In November 2007, eight people were
killed in a high school north of the capital Helsinki by an 18-year-old
who later killed himself.
Less than a year later, a 22-year-old
shot and killed 10 people, nine students and a teacher, in a classroom
at a cooking school in the western city of Kauhajoki before also
committing suicide.
And in May 2012, two people were killed
and seven more wounded after a shooting near Helsinki by another
18-year-old. The attacker is currently serving life in prison.
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