08-02-2025 12:00:00 AM
Police chief investigators Kristoffer Zickbauer and Anna Bergkvist at a press conference in Orebro, Swede —AFP
Agencies STOCKHOLM
Syrians and a Bosnian were among the 10 victims of a gunman who carried out the worst shooting in Swedish history, at a school in Orebro on Tuesday. It was the first information about those murdered, and it came from two embassies rather than police, who said only that there were victims of a number of nationalities.
Police said the suspected gunman, named locally as 35-year-old Rickard Andersson, was found dead afterwards, with three guns by his side. Anna Bergqvist, the head of the police investigation, told the BBC police could confirm only that people of multiple nationalities and ages were caught up in the shooting.
One Bosnian national was killed and another wounded, the Bosnian embassy said. The Syrian embassy gave no details of the number of Syrians affected, but said: "We offer our sincere condolences and sympathies to the families of the victims, including dear Syrian citizens, and to the friendly Swedish people."
However, it soon emerged that Salim Iskef, a 29-year-old Orthodox Christian who fled the war in Syria in 2015, was one of the 10 victims. The shooting has left the immigrant community in Sweden on the edge. “We are getting all our information from the media and I don't know why," said Nour Afram, 36, who was inside the Risbergska school when the attack began.
"We need more information," she said. "We don't know why he did it, why did he target this school? Was he sick or was it something else?" Zaki Aydin, a 50-year-old Syriac language teacher in Orebro, said he was afraid for the first time for his young students, who are mostly from the Middle East. "We are foreigners, we have to be careful now," he said.
Aydin used to have the doors of his classroom and the church building open when he taught. "Now we are closing them," he said. "And yesterday, I asked someone to stand outside to prevent anyone we didn't know already from coming in."