2nd suspect involved in deadly Oslo shooting in Pakistan: Norway Police

Norwegian police said on Friday they had issued an international arrest warrant for a second suspect who is now thought to be in Pakistan over a shooting in June that killed two people near a gay bar in central Oslo.


ANI | Oslo | Updated: 24-09-2022 16:02 IST | Created: 24-09-2022 16:02 IST
2nd suspect involved in deadly Oslo shooting in Pakistan: Norway Police
Representative Image. (Photo Credit - Reuters). Image Credit: ANI
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Norwegian police said on Friday they had issued an international arrest warrant for a second suspect who is now thought to be in Pakistan over a shooting in June that killed two people near a gay bar in central Oslo. They confirmed a report by TV2 that the suspect was Arfan Qadeer Bhatti, a 45-year-old with prior convictions, reported Time of Pakistan.

They did not specify what role he allegedly played in the shooting, nor where he currently was. TV2 said Bhatti was thought to be in Pakistan, which does not have an extradition treaty with Norway. Police said cooperation with the country concerned was positive and extradition was a "possibility".

Police initially told a press conference they were seeking, for "complicity in a terrorist act", a Norwegian in his 40s who had already shown up on police radar and was thought currently to be abroad, reported Time of Pakistan. The first suspect, Zaniar Matapour, is alleged to have opened fire near a gay bar in central Oslo in the early hours of June 25, during celebrations linked to the city's Pride festival.

The shooting killed two men, aged 54 and 60, and wounded 21 others. Matapour, 43, was quickly arrested, reported Time of Pakistan. Oslo's annual Pride parade was cancelled on Saturday following a deadly shooting at a gay bar, reported CNN.

Matapour, a Norwegian of Iranian origin, had been known to Norwegian Police Security Service (PST) intelligence service since 2015. There were concerns about his radicalisation and membership in "an extremist network". Norway's domestic intelligence service described the attack as "an act of terrorism" and said Matapour had "difficulties with his mental health".

He is currently at a psychiatric hospital for a court-ordered mental assessment, reported Time of Pakistan. (ANI)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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