A university
student whose family immigrated from Somalia rammed his car into a crowd at
Ohio State University and attacked them with a butcher knife, injuring 11
before police fatally shot him.
Identifying
the assailant as Abdul Razak Ali Artan, officials in the northern US state said
he appeared to have acted alone in what was being investigated as a possible
terror attack.
He also
appears to have made an anti-US posting on Facebook minutes before the attack,
on a page that was quickly disabled or taken down by authorities, US media
said.
"I can't
take it any more. America! Stop interfering with other countries, especially
the Muslim Ummah. We are not weak. We are not weak, remember that," the
post quoted by ABC television said, using a term referring to the global
community of Muslims.
"If you
want us Muslims to stop carrying lone wolf attacks, then make peace," the
post reads. "We will not let you sleep unless you give peace to the
Muslims."
Artan also
referred to Anwar al-Awlaki, a US-born Al-Qaeda cleric, as a hero in the
posting.
His shocking
attakc lasted just a few minutes -- from the car careening into the crowd until
the suspect was shot dead -- but triggered a tense lockdown on the university's
main campus in Columbus, with panicked students hiding in bathrooms before the
scene was declared secure.
Officials said
11 people were being treated at local hospitals for stabbing wounds and
injuries from the motor vehicle. None of their injuries were life-threatening.
Columbus
police chief Kim Jacobs said earlier in the day they were considering the
"possibility" that it was terrorism related.
US media
reported that Artan was of Somali descent, though officials did not confirm
that information. They did not release his exact age, saying only that they
believed he was born in 1998.
An OSU student
of the same name also was profiled in the August issue of student newspaper The
Lantern, for an article in which he spoke of the lack of Muslim prayer rooms on
campus.
Artan, who was
identified as a third-year transfer student studying logistics management, told
the paper he was uncomfortable with praying on campus.
"If
people look at me, a Muslim praying, I don't know what they're going to think,
what's going to happen," he said.
The rampage
comes two months after a Somali immigrant stabbed 10 people at a mall in Minnesota,
before he was fatally shot by an off-duty police officer.
The Minnesota
assailant, 20-year-old Dahir Ahmed Adan, was described as
"radicalized" and the Islamic State group claimed the attack as the
work of an IS "soldier."
- A tense
lockdown -
Monday's
attack unfolded just before 10:00 am (1500 GMT), when police were alerted that
a car had struck pedestrians on campus, and that the driver had jumped out
wielding a large knife.
"We could
tell that the suspect was in the car by himself," said Craig Stone, chief
of police at the university, describing a review of surveillance camera footage
of his grey sedan.
A fire alarm,
which investigators believed to be unrelated, had caused students and staff to
evacuate a building prior to the attack.
The attacker
"exited the vehicle, and used a butcher knife to start cutting
pedestrians," Stone said.
"Our
officer was on scene in less than a minute and he ended the situation in less
than a minute. He engaged the suspect, and he eliminated the threat."
After the
suspect was shot dead by the responding officer, identified as 28-year-old Alan
Harujko, university officials sent out a campus-wide alert to initiate a
lockdown due to a possible active shooting incident.
SWAT teams
fanned out across the facility and an FBI team was also on the scene, searching
buildings for any additional suspects.
- Screams and
running -
It took nearly
two hours before officials lifted the lockdown, and shocked students and staff
began streaming out of buildings. The university canceled classes for the rest
of the day.
"I was
right there," student Joseph Noll told Columbus television station WBNS.
"I just heard some screams, and I saw people running."
Cydney Ireland
told ABC she was walking out of class when she also heard screams.
"Everybody
was running in any direction they possibly could, students were running out of
the classroom building," she said from her hiding spot in a locked
bathroom.
Ohio State has
roughly 60,000 students on the main campus in Columbus, which sprawls across
more than 1,900 acres (770 hectares).
A number of
vigils and gatherings were planned, as university officials offered student and
staff counseling.
"Days
such as these test our spirit," university president Michael Drake said in
a note to students and staff, "But together we remain unified in the face
of adversity."
"I
encourage anyone in our community in need of assistance to utilize the
university's resources,."
Classes are
scheduled to resume Tuesday.
"Our
hearts go out to the families of those affected in Ohio -- a tragic attack. Our
prayers are with them," said Vice president-elect Mike Pence in New York.
"While we
do not yet have confirmation of terrorist connections, this is the type of
indiscriminate violence our enemies are urging their followers to use against
us," House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Michael McCaul said in a
statement.
"Whatever
the case, we will continue to monitor the investigation to ensure any potential
accomplices or instigators are found and brought to justice."
AFP
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