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Trollhättan school stabbing
2015 attack on Kronan school in Trollhättan, Sweden From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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On 22 October 2015, a mass stabbing occurred at Kronan Primary School (Kronans grundskola)[a] in Trollhättan, Sweden. 21-year-old Anton Lundin Pettersson killed three people and injured another two with a sword, later dying from gunshot wounds sustained during his apprehension.
The initial police investigation concluded that Pettersson was motivated by opposition to immigration and had chosen the school as his target due to its location in a neighbourhood with a high immigrant population.
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Background
The city of Trollhättan has a history of previous hate crimes, including an arson attack at a mosque in the 1990s. It has been described as the most ethnically segregated city in Sweden.[2]
Stabbing
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Pettersson entered Kronan at 10:06, wearing black clothing, a cape, a Stahlhelm-style helmet and a paintball mask. At first, eyewitnesses believed Pettersson's presence to be a Halloween prank.[3] Media outlets compared Pettersson's appearance to the appearance of Darth Vader, a fictional character in the film franchise Star Wars.[4]
20-year-old teaching assistant Lavin Eskandar, an ethnic Feyli Kurd,[5] confronted Pettersson, who immediately stabbed him. Eskandar died at the scene.[6] When 14-year-old student David Issa yelled "What the hell are you doing?" Pettersson swung at him with the sword, lightly injuring him.[1][7]
Pettersson then stabbed a 15-year old Somali student, Ahmed Hassan, who died from his injuries later in the hospital, and 15-year-old Syrian student Wahed Kosa, who survived his injuries.[8][9]
Whilst wandering the halls, two students encountered Pettersson and, believing his presence to be a Halloween prank, posed with him and took a picture. Niclas Hallgren, the city's police chief, said that Pettersson spared them due to them having white skin.[10][11]
Shortly after, a 42-year-old teacher, Nazir Amso, confronted Pettersson and demanded he remove his mask. Petterson then charged at Amso and stabbed him. Amso died of his injuries six weeks later in hospital on 3 December. Shortly before 10:16, police officers arrived at the scene, ten minutes after Petterson arrived at the school. Pettersson reportedly charged at police and was shot once in the abdomen, later dying from his injuries in hospital.[12][13][14]
During the attack, Pettersson played the song "Dragula" by Rob Zombie on loop.[15] Apart from his sword, he carried with him a tantō knife as a backup weapon, which was unused in the attack.[1]
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Perpetrator
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Anton Niclas Lundin Pettersson[b] (22 June 1994 – 22 October 2015)[16] was identified as the attacker by Expressen.[17] Pettersson had no criminal record and was not a member of any political organisation, but had supported a petition by the Sweden Democrats to initiate a referendum on immigration.[2] According to Aftonbladet, Pettersson had visited far-right and extremist websites supporting Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany and had also joined a Facebook group that opposed immigration to Sweden.[18] The Swedish Security Service was called in to investigate these findings.[18]
Pettersson lived in an apartment building far away from Kronan but chose to attack the school due to it being in Kronogården, a town with a high immigrant population; police cited this as more evidence towards his motive.[2] Former classmates described Pettersson as a lonely person who "lived in his own world" and dressed in black clothing influenced by the emo or rock scene.[18] There is strong evidence to suggest he had autism spectrum disorder, although his parents did not want him diagnosed. He often avoided eye contact, had difficulty understanding other people, and was characterized as being physically rigid and stubborn. One pediatrician who studied the case posthumously diagnosed him as such.[1]
Bjørn Ihler, a survivor of the 2011 Norway attacks, wrote in The Guardian that in 2013, Pettersson had liked a YouTube video of former Ku Klux Klan leader Johnny Lee Clary testifying how a positive experience with a black man had caused him to disavow his previously-held racist beliefs.[19] He was also said to have interacted with online content that demeaned women and religious people.[19]
Self-harm scars were found on his arms, and it was later revealed that he had completed an online test for depression, along with watching videos of people committing suicide. He had saved material surrounding hopelessness, being misunderstood, self-hatred, violence, and death, along with material suggesting he was uncertain about his sexual identity.[1]
A day before his attack, he watched a video collage of military footage starring Nazis during World War II, along with the song When Evil Speaks by Belgian electro-industrial group Suicide Commando.[20] Less than an hour before the killings, he sent a message to one of his online friends, a 25-year-old Dutch man, stating that he would "be dead in the next hour or two" and called him the best friend he ever had. He also declared that he hated himself and stated that he wanted responding officers to shoot him dead in an attempt of suicide by cop.[1]
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Aftermath and reactions
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On the morning of 23 October, a day after the attack, Swedish police and media confirmed that the attack had "racist motives" and that it was a "hate crime".[21] Niclas Hallgren, the city's police chief, stated that all of the victims of the attack were "dark-skinned".[2] Head of Investigation, Thord Haraldsson said that CCTV footage showed that Pettersson spared the lives of students with white skin.[10][11] The initial police investigation concluded that Pettersson was motivated by opposition to immigration and had chosen the school as his target due to its location in a neighbourhood with a high immigrant population.[2]
After the news of the attack, Prime Minister Stefan Löfven travelled to Trollhättan, calling it a "black day" for the country.[12] Minister for Integration Anders Ygeman wrote on Twitter: "It is with sadness and dismay I received the news of the attack on the school in Trollhättan. My thoughts go to the victims and their families".[12] King Carl XVI Gustaf said that the royal family received the news "with great dismay and sadness".[22]
During the days leading up to Halloween, there were reports of people wearing suspicious outfits or brandishing weapons, which were discovered to be people celebrating Halloween. The police warned the public not to carry imitation weapons with their Halloween costumes, to avoid potentially dangerous misunderstandings.[23] Kronan school remained closed until 2 November, when it reopened with higher security.[24]
On 29 September 2017, a book about the attack was published, Det som aldrig fick ske (transl. What Was Never Supposed To Happen). The book contained information about the attack previously unavailable to the public, including a message Pettersson sent to an online friend before the attack that the Pettersson family did not know about. The author, Åsa Erlandsson , spoke to the brother of Pettersson.[25] Erlandsson won the Stora Journalistpriset for the book.[26]
On 15 March 2019, two consecutive mass shootings occurred in a terrorist attack on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, where 51 people were killed and 40 others were injured. The perpetrator behind the shootings mentioned Pettersson in his manifesto and declared his support for him, in addition to writing Petterson's name on one of his guns.[27][28]
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Notes
- Despite literally translating to "primary school" or "elementary school", in Sweden, a grundskola offers schooling from grades one through nine, similar to a charter school.
References
Further reading
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