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Gunman kills 3 on Dutch tram; Mayor suspects terror motive

Police personnel inspecting the tram at 24 Oktoberplace in Utrecht where the shooting took place on Monday.

Police personnel inspecting the tram at 24 Oktoberplace in Utrecht where the shooting took place on Monday.  

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Hunt on for Turkish-born man; security tightened

A gunman killed three people and wounded nine on a streetcar in the Dutch city of Utrecht on Monday morning in what the Mayor said appeared to be a terror attack, touching off a manhunt.

Authorities immediately raised the terror alert for the area to the highest level. Security at airports and key buildings were tightened.

The Utrecht police later released a photo of 37-year-old Turkish-born man Gokmen Tanis and said he was “associated with the attack.”

The incident came three days after 50 people were killed by a white supremacist at two mosques in New Zealand. There was no immediate indication of any link between the two events.

Utrecht Mayor Jan van Zanen said three people were killed and nine wounded, three of them seriously.

“We cannot exclude, even stronger, we assume a terror motive,” Mayor van Zanen said.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said that “a terror motive is not excluded” and that the attack was met throughout the country with “a mix of disbelief and disgust.”

“If it is a terror attack, then we have only one answer — our nation, democracy, must be stronger that fanaticism and violence,” he added.

The shooting took place at a busy intersection in a residential neighborhood. Police erected a white tent over an area where a body appeared to be lying next to the tram.

Anti-terror officers gathered in front of an apartment building close to the scene. A dog wearing a vest with a camera mounted on it was also seen outside the building.

Police spokesman Bernhard Jens said one person might have fled by car, and he did not rule out the possibility that more than one shooter was involved.

The Netherlands’ anti-terror coordinator, Pieter-Jaap Aalbersberg, raised the threat alert to its highest level, 5, around Utrecht, a city of nearly 350,000.

Political parties halted campaigning ahead of provincial elections scheduled for Wednesday that will also determine the makeup of Parliament’s upper house.

In neighboring Germany, police said they stepped up surveillance of the Dutch border, watching not only major highways but also minor crossings and train routes.

German authorities said they were initially told to look out for a red Renault Clio compact car but were later informed it had been found abandoned in Utrecht.

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