‘Dark day’: Survivors, country mourn victims of Sweden’s deadliest mass shooting


Survivors of Sweden’s worst mass shooting on Wednesday recalled trying to save the lives of their comrades at a school for adults in Örebro, a day after a gunman killed 11 people on what the prime minister called a “dark day” in the country’s history.

Police said there was no evidence the suspect, named by Swedish media as Rickard Andersson, a 35-year-old unemployed recluse, had “ideological motives.” A police source also named Andersson as the suspect.

A police spokesperson declined to comment on the name of the suspect.

At least 11 people were killed and several more wounded in the attack at the Risbergska adult education centre in Örebro, a city of more than 100,000 people some 200 kilometres west of Stockholm, on Tuesday. The police discovered Andersson’s body at the scene.

Police believe the killer, who they said was not previously known to them, acted alone.

A person crouches to light a candle at a makeshift vigil.
A mourner lights a candle at a makeshift memorial near the Risbergska school in Örebro on Wednesday. (Christine Olsson/TT News Agency/Reuters)

“We will get back on what motives there are,” local police chief Roberto Eid Forest told a press conference earlier on Wednesday.

Five of the six wounded who were treated in hospital — four women and two men — had required surgery for gunshot wounds and remained in a serious condition, regional authorities said.

The exact number of those wounded in the attack has not been confirmed by police.

Some students were in class, while others were having lunch when the gunman began firing at around 12:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

Police officers and vehicles are seen in a parking lot cordoned off by police tape.
Police are seen near the Risbergska school in Örebro on Wednesday. (Christine Olsson/TT News Agency/Reuters)

“A guy next to me was shot in the shoulder. He was bleeding a lot. When I looked behind me I saw three people on the floor bleeding. Everyone was shocked. They said: ‘Go out! Get out!,'” a student named Marwa told broadcaster TV4.

“I took my friend’s shawl and tied it tightly around his shoulder so that he wouldn’t bleed so much.”

Hellen Werme, 35, a nursing student, said that after hearing shots she had hidden under a bed to evade the gunman.

A person closes their eyes while in thought.
Hellen Werme, a survivor of the mass shooting, reacts during an interview in Örebro on Wednesday. (Kuba Stezycki/Reuters)

“The teacher shouted for us to lock the door and get down on the floor,” the mother of two told Reuters. “I thought that this was my last time, my last day. That I’m getting shot today.”

Werme said she still had not been able to get in touch with five of her classmates who were in a different part of the school when the shooting occurred.

“I never want to go back there,” she said.


Many students in Sweden’s adult school system are immigrants seeking qualifications to help them find jobs in the Nordic country, while also learning Swedish.

The Campus Risbergska school has around 2,700 pupils, around 800 of whom were enrolled in Swedish For Immigrants courses, according to information provided by the local authority.

It said that students, who vary in age from 18 to 70, came from a range of backgrounds and nationalities.

‘We must all come together’

Flags were flying at half-mast in Örebro, as well as at parliament and the royal palace in Stockholm.

King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia visited the school and attended a memorial service at the St. Nikolai church in central Örebro.

“A grieving process is hard to do alone,” the king told reporters after laying white flowers at a memorial site with candles near the school. “I think all of Sweden feels it has experienced this traumatic event.”

People are seen carrying flowers while they walk.
From right: Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, his wife Birgitta Ed, King Carl Gustaf and Queen Silvia arrive at a memorial for the victims in Örebro on Wednesday. (Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images)

The royal couple were joined by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson in the trip to Örebro.

“Feb. 4 will forever mark a dark day in Swedish history,” Kristersson said in a statement. “We are a country in mourning and we must all come together.

“Together, we must help the injured and their relatives bear the grief and weight of this day.”

A Swedish flag is flown at half-mast outside a building.
A Swedish flag flies at half-mast outside the Örebro police station on Wednesday. (Anders Wiklund/TT News Agency/Reuters)

Candles and flowers have been placed near the single-storey school in Haga Street, where police officers continued their investigations.

The morning after the attack, Örebro was still in shock over the worst mass murder in Swedish history.

“That it could happen in Örebro, that was totally unexpected,” Mayor John Johansson told broadcaster SVT. “I understand that children, our youth, are very afraid today. So am I.”

Police said they did not see any general threat against schools or preschools in the country, nor against adult education schools, including Swedish classes for immigrants.

Sweden has been struggling with a wave of shootings and bombings caused by an endemic gang crime problem that has seen the country of 10 million people record by far the highest per capita rate of gun violence in the European Union in recent years.

However, fatal attacks at schools are rare.

Ten people were killed in seven incidents of deadly violence at schools between 2010 and 2022, according to the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention.





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