Oslo: A gunman armed with multiple weapons opened fire in a mosque near Oslo on Saturday, injuring one person before being overpowered by an elderly worshipper and arrested, Norwegian police and witnesses said.
Hours after the attack, the body of a young woman related to the suspect was found in a home in the suburb of Baerum where the shooting took place earlier in the day, police said Saturday evening.
Investigators are treating her death as suspicious and have opened a murder probe.
The head of the mosque described the assailant as a young white man dressed in black and said he was wearing a helmet and bulletproof vest.
He said only three people had been inside the al-Noor Islamic centre at the time of the attack.
Police were alerted to the shooting shortly after 4 pm (1400 GMT).
Officers first reported that a victim had been shot, but later clarified one person had sustained "minor injuries" and that it was unclear if they were gunshot wounds.
Police said the suspect appeared to have acted on his own.
"It is a Norwegian young man, with a Norwegian background. He lives in the vicinity," Oslo police spokesman Rune Skjold had told a press conference earlier Saturday.
Skjold added that the suspect had been known to police before the incident but could not be described as someone with a "criminal background".
Norway was the scene of one of the worst-ever attacks by a right-wing extremist in July 2011, when 77 people were killed by Anders Behring Breivik.
"One of our members has been shot by a white man with a helmet and uniform," Irfan Mushtaq, head of the mosque, told local media.
Mushtaq said that the man had carried multiple weapons, but that he had been subdued by a member of the mosque.
Mushtaq himself had arrived at the scene shortly after being alerted about the gunman, and had gone to the back of the building while waiting for police to arrive.
"Then I see that there are cartridges scattered and blood on the carpets, and I see one of our members is sitting on the perpetrator, covered in blood," Mushtaq told Norwegian newspaper VG. He said the man who apparently overpowered the shooter was 75 years old and had been reading the Koran after a prayer session.
According to Mushtaq, the mosque had not received any threats ahead of the shooting. The attack took place on the eve of the Muslim celebration of Eid Al-Adha, marking the end of the Muslim pilgrimage Hajj. Police said Saturday they would be sending out more officers so that those celebrating would "be as safe as possible".
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Bengaluru (PTI): Karnataka Home Minister G Parameshwara on Tuesday said the state government has begun verification of reports about Bangladeshi nationals obtaining Aadhaar and other identity documents and assured that action would be taken wherever violations are found.
Speaking to reporters here, Parameshwara said he has already instructed senior police officials to compile detailed data on the presence of Bangladeshi nationals in Karnataka.
The focus, he said, is on identifying those who have entered the country illegally and secured local identity documents to stay in the state.
"We are verifying it. Already, I have told the Director General of Police and the police commissioners to extract statistics about Bangladeshis staying in Karnataka," Parameshwara said, adding, "They have come here and got different kinds of ID cards. They have got Aadhaar cards and other IDs and are behaving as if they are not even Bangladeshis."
His response came following the arrest of two Bangladeshi nationals in the state, who allegedly possessed Aadhaar cards as well.
The Home Minister said the state government has already deported some Bangladeshi nationals and will continue to do so wherever such cases are established.
"We will verify and take action accordingly. We have deported a few," he said.
Referring to how illegal immigrants may be entering the country, Parameshwara said border management is the responsibility of the Centre.
"It is said that they sneak into India by paying bribes. It's the Centre to look after borders through the Border Security Force (BSF) or the military.
There are porous borders. We don't know how they enter, whether by paying a bribe or stealthily," he said.
He said many illegal immigrants choose Bengaluru as it is considered a peaceful city. "They settle in Bengaluru, considering it peaceful," he noted.
Parameshwara said the police had identified Bangladeshi nationals working in coffee estates in Sakaleshpur and deported them.
"We got to know that some are staying in Sakaleshpur coffee estates. We identified them and deported them. They get menial jobs," he said.
The Home Minister said information has also been received about the presence of Bangladeshi nationals in Anekal and neighbouring regions.
"We got the information that they are at Anekal on the Bengaluru outskirts and neighbouring regions, which we are verifying. Wherever there are Bangladeshis, we will identify them and send them back," he said.
On reports of certain groups or individuals voluntarily checking antecedents to trace Bangladeshi nationals, Parameshwara issued a clear warning.
"There is no scope for taking the law into their hands," he said, adding that citizens can only pass information to the police.
"They can provide information to police about the presence of Bangladeshis, but other than that, they cannot take action on their own. Can they deport them?" he asked.
He cautioned that any attempt to manhandle people would invite strict action.
"If they misbehave and manhandle people, then we will take action against them. We have not given them authority -- be it BJP or anyone else, there is no right to manhandle them," he said.
Parameshwara said the government would make public the figures related to deportations. "We will release data on the number of people deported," he added.
