
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
STOCKHOLM (Worthy News) – Swedish police investigated Thursday whether the country’s worst mass shooting on record was racially motivated after it emerged that people of several nationalities, including Syrians, were among the 11 killed by a lone gunman at a school for adult education.
Anna Bergqvist, who is leading the police investigation, said people of “multiple nationalities, different genders, and different ages” were among those killed at Risbergska school in the city of Örebro on Tuesday.
Asked by reporters whether there was any evidence of racist motivation for the attack, Bergqvist said: “We are looking at all of those parts.”
The Syrian embassy in Stockholm announced its citizens were among the dead. “With deep sorrow and grief, the embassy of the Syrian Arab Republic in the kingdom of Sweden expresses its strong condemnation of the criminal incident that took place in the Swedish city of Örebro, which resulted in … innocent victims,” the embassy wrote on social media.
“It extends its sincere condolences to the families of the victims, including dear Syrian citizens, and to the friendly Swedish people, and we wish a speedy recovery to the injured.”
Among the victims was Salim Iskef, 28, who phoned his fiancee from the school and told her he had been shot. “He called me and said, “I’ve been shot, they shot us.’ He said he loves me, and that’s the last thing I heard,” Kareen Elia, 24, told the media in tears. During the video call, she could see somebody lying still beside him and blood on his hand.
The couple planned to marry on 25 July. They had booked the venue, and Elia, who moved to Sweden from Syria in 2015, had tried on her wedding dress.
The tragic details came after, on Wednesday, the Swedish king, Carl XVI Gustaf, and Queen Silvia visited a memorial near the scene of the mass shooting. The king told reporters that he and the queen were “extremely upset” by what happened. He said: ‘We want them to feel that they are not alone in their mourning.’
The gun attack on Tuesday that left 11 people dead, including the gunman, and six in hospital was “a one-man operation, police said.
Sweden has struggled with a wave of shootings and bombings caused by what observers have called endemic gang crime.
It has led to the country having by far the highest per capita rate of gun violence in the EU in recent years. Sweden, long an open society, recently joined the NATO military alliance.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
President Donald Trump abruptly canceled planned U.S. strikes against Iran on Thursday, saying a multinational agreement to end the conflict had been approved by top Iranian leadership and was awaiting final documents and a formal signing.
Federal authorities said Thursday they have accounted for 146,000 unaccompanied migrant children who entered the United States during former President Joe Biden’s administration, while roughly 300,000 minors remain unaccounted for, amid allegations that many vulnerable children were placed with fraudulent sponsors and exposed to abuse, labor exploitation, and sex trafficking.
Congress left Washington without renewing Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, allowing a key foreign surveillance authority used to track foreign terrorists and national security threats to expire Friday.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit on June 11 temporarily allowed President Donald Trump’s 10 percent global tariffs to remain in effect, extending a pause on a lower court ruling that had struck down the duties as unlawful.
Dutch police detained a young man l man after four people, including three children, were killed when a car struck a group of cyclists during a school outing near the Belgian border on Thursday, officials said.
The leaders of Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia are expected to meet this month amid growing debate within the European Union over how future member states should be admitted and monitored.
China has condemned the European Union’s ban on public funding for Chinese-made solar inverters, a move that analysts say could affect more than a fifth of new solar capacity and complicate efforts to meet the bloc’s self-imposed “climate targets.”