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Denmark Charges Two as Europe on Edge after Fresh Attacks

Two men were charged in Copenhagen on Monday with helping the gunman who killed two people in twin weekend attacks that have stoked renewed fears of Islamist and anti-Semitic violence in Europe.

Flags were flying at half-mast across Denmark after the shootings that stunned one of the world's most peaceful nations.

The suspected attacker, gunned down by police in a pre-dawn shootout on Sunday, was identified as a 22-year-old Dane with a history of violent crime who had only been freed from jail two weeks ago.

Danish intelligence said the gunman, who killed two people in attacks just hours apart at a cultural center and a synagogue may have been inspired by last month's Islamist attacks in Paris.

"A new type of war," thundered the right-wing Jyllands-Posten newspaper, which had itself triggered violent protests across the Muslim world after publishing cartoons mocking the Prophet Mohammed in 2005.

Two suspects were charged Monday with helping the Copenhagen attacker get rid of his weapon and giving him somewhere to hide, according to the lawyer of one of the men, Michael Juul Eriksen, told AFP.

Police confirmed two men had been charged with aiding the gunman but did not confirm the specific allegations against them.

From Tokyo to London, Riyadh to New York, expressions of sympathy and outrage poured after the shootings described by Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt as a "cynical act of terror".

Several media identified the gunman as Omar El-Hussein, who was said by the Ekstra-Bladet tabloid to have been released from prison two weeks ago after serving a term for aggravated assault -- raising fears he may have become radicalized behind bars.

Investigators said the man, who was born and raised in Denmark, had a history of assault and weapons offenses.

In a killing spree that bore a striking resemblance to the Paris attacks, the gunman first fired off a volley of bullets outside the Krudttoenden centre on Saturday afternoon during a panel discussion about Islam and free speech.

Documentary film-maker Finn Norgaard, 55, who colleagues said had a special interest in the problems of integration in Denmark, was killed.

In the second attack in the early hours of Sunday, the gunman opened fire outside the synagogue during a bar mitzvah, killing a 37-year-old Jewish man named as Dan Uzan who was guarding the building.

Five policemen were wounded in the two incidents before the gunman was tracked down to a working class district of Copenhagen and killed in a shootout with police.

Police said the gunman was already "on the radar" of the intelligence services and that they were investigating if he had traveled to conflict zones such as Syria and Iraq.

"He may have been inspired by the events that took place in Paris a few weeks ago," national intelligence chief Jens Madsen told reporters Sunday.

A photo of the suspect showed him wearing a black puffer jacket and a maroon balaclava and carrying a black bag.

Armed officers raided a Copenhagen Internet cafe in one of a series of operations on Sunday as police stepped up patrols on the streets of the city of one million people.

The central area of the capital that is home to both the synagogue and Noerreport station, the country's busiest rail hub, was cordoned off by police carrying machine guns.

Tearful Danes have laid flowers and candles at the sites of the killings, while the Copenhagen bourse said it would observe a minute's silence in honor of the victims.

A columnist in the left-of-center Politiken newspaper linked the shootings to the rise of the anti-immigrant Danish People's Party in a country were immigrants make up about nine percent of the population.

The attacks have revived fears in Europe about jihadist violence and anti-Semitic attacks against Jews since the bloody events in Paris on January 7-9.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu immediately urged European Jews to move to his country after Saturday's shooting, echoing a similar call made after the Paris attacks.

But France responded icily to his comments, with President Francois Hollande saying that Jews belonged in Europe and "in particular in France" despite anti-Semitic incidents including the defacing of hundreds of tombstones at a Jewish cemetery.

Four Jews were among a total of 17 people killed in the Paris attacks on a kosher supermarket and the Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly, which had published cartoons lampooning Mohammed.

World governments reacted with outrage to the Copenhagen killings.

British Prime Minister David Cameron condemned them as an "appalling attack on free speech and religious freedom", while the United States branded them "deplorable" and U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon said there was "no justification" for the bloodshed.

Source: Agence France Presse


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