Police shoot man after bomb scare at Swedish train station
STOCKHOLM: Police in the southern Swedish city of Malmo on Monday shot a man at the central train station who claimed to have a bomb, police and witnesses said. Police said the shooting occurred shortly after 10 a.m. (0800 GMT) when officers responding to emergency calls confronted a man acting in a threatening manner. Local media quoted several witnesses as saying that the man, aged around 40, had thrown a sports bag on the ground and shouted he had a bomb. After police approached the man he continued to behave threateningly, spokeswoman Evelina Olsson told. “A situation developed which required a police officer to fire their service weapon,” Olsson said. The man was taken to hospital while the train station was evacuated and the bomb squad was called. Police said investigators are waiting to question him.
-
OpenAI And ServiceNow Team Up To Embed ChatGPT In Business Workflows -
Johnny Depp Prepares For His Massive Comeback After Years Of Struggle -
Meghan Markle Is Ready To Put A Cork In It All By Giving Prince Harry Baby No. 3: ‘She Wants A Break’ -
Billie Eilish Speaks Out Against Authority: 'It's Very Strange' -
'Greenland Will Stay Greenland', Former Trump Adviser Hints At New Twist -
Brooklyn Beckham's Wedding Dance With Mom Victoria Sparks Hilarious Memes -
King Charles' Latest Photos A Statement On His Health? -
Tom Cruise's Biggest Dream Crushed By The President? -
King Charles, Queen Camilla Send Message To King Of Spain After Train Crash -
'We Believe Brooklyn': David Beckham Trolled After Son's Statement -
Microsoft CEO Says AI Must Deliver Real World Impact To Survive -
Stranger Knocks, Then Opens Fire On Indiana Judge And Wife -
Priscilla Presley's Derogatory Remarks On Late Daughter Lisa Marie Reignite Controversy -
Japan Unveils Anti-ship Missile With ‘barrel-roll’ Evasion To Outsmart Defenses -
How Brooklyn Beckham 'mentor' Prince Harry Inspiring Him To Speak Against Family? -
Zac Efron, Kenny Ortega Revisit 'High School Musical' After 2 Decades