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Bomb threat at Vienna university leads to large police operation

Bomb threat at Vienna university leads to large police operation

Yahoo21 hours ago

Vienna police deployed in force on Thursday in response to a bomb threat in the foyer of building of the Austrian capital's Technical University, just days after the country was shaken by a deadly school shooting.
An unidentified man opened the door of the building's foyer, threw a parcel inside and said: "Soon it will go bang," a police spokeswoman said.
A university security guard informed the police in response.
The spokeswoman said police were evacuating the building, and the area was cordoned off.
Bomb disposal experts were due to check the parcel once all the students had been taken to safety, she said. There were thought to be hundreds in the building as students are currently sitting exams.
The police operation impacted public transport and traffic in central Vienna.
Austrian police have received a series of threats following a mass school shooting in the country's second city, Graz, on Tuesday.

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Analysis-Killings at European schools fan concern U.S. problem is spreading
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Analysis-Killings at European schools fan concern U.S. problem is spreading

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Austrian shooter posted online just before school massacre, media say
Austrian shooter posted online just before school massacre, media say

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VIENNA (Reuters) -The 21-year-old man behind Austria's worst school shooting posted on social media from the building just before he shot dead 10 people then killed himself this week, Austrian newspapers reported on Friday. Police described the Austrian as an introvert and an avid player of online shooting games who had largely withdrawn from the outside world before he carefully planned Tuesday's attack. Newspapers Heute and Kronen Zeitung published details of a photo the young man apparently took inside a toilet cubicle with a timestamp minutes before police said the attack began in the school in Graz, a city in the southern state of Styria. The photo was published on X, they said. Kronen Zeitung said the man had an interest in the 1999 U.S. Columbine school massacre in Colorado carried out by two teenage shooters and that he apparently used a photo of one of the pair on his profile with his online gaming pseudonym. Heute said the man had also published pictures of the pistol and the shotgun he would go on to use during the shooting on other social media. A spokesman for police in Styria declined to confirm the reports or whether the man had social media accounts. Police have been scouring the perpetrator's electronic devices, and said on Thursday that they had not discovered any video of the high school shooting on his mobile phone.

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