Survivors of Sweden’s worst mass shooting on Wednesday recalled trying to save the lives of their friends at an adult education school in Örebro, a day after a gunman killed 11 people on what the prime minister called a “dark day” in the country’s history.
A large number of people were injured after the gunman opened fire on the campus in the central Swedish city of Örebro, according to Robert Eid Forest, the city’s police chief.
Police said there was no evidence that the suspect, identified by Swedish media as Rickard Andersson, a 35-year-old unemployed loner, had “ideological motives.” A police source also identified Andersson as a suspect.