The Swedish victim of a mass shot was called the fiancé to tell her that she loved her for the last time
Orebbro, Sweden -Logged and bleeding, Salim Karim Iskef managed to shoot his fiancé to tell her that he loved her for the last time before he died this week Swedish the most deadly mass shooting. The 28-year-old asked Kareen Alia to look after his mother and himself before the call was over.
There was no answer when she called, and later learned that he had died of his wounds, one of the 10 people killed when the attacker opened fire on Tuesday at the Adult Educational Center in Orebbro, where Iskef studied to become a sister.
The couple recently bought a home and planned to get married this summer.
Cuba Stezycki/Reuters
“He had all these dreams in his heart. Unfortunately, all these dreams are gone. Their light is extinguished,” said Father Jacob Kasselia, a priest of their local Orthodox Christian Church, for the Swedish Emiterine of TV4.
“How should I live without him?”
Authorities have announced that the scorer, who has not yet been officially identified, was related to the Adult Education Center in which opened fire with at least one weapon like a rifle And maybe he attended school early there.
The school, the Risberg Campus, offers primary and medium -sized teaching for adults over 20 and over, Swedish for immigrants, vocational training and programs for people with intellectual disabilities. It is located on the outskirts of Orebbro, 125 miles west of Stockholm.
Iskef studied care there after serving as a healthcare professional during the Coid-19 pandemia. His family escaped from Syria between 2014 and 2015 because of the long -standing civil war.
“We have lived all our lives together,” his sister Hanan Eskif told TV4. “We worked together and we studied together, we went to church together. All my life I have been with him, how should I live without him?”
Cuba Stezycki/Reuters
Their family held a memorial service in their Orthodox Christian Church, although they did not get Iskef’s body by the end of Thursday.
“We keep looking through the window, thinking that he may be back and knock on the door and we will have to open it. We do not sleep, we do not eat, we do not drink. Nothing, we just sit and watch,” Eskif Emiter said.
A little new information confirmed about Sagittarius or his motive
The shooter was later found dead with three rifles, 10 empty magazines and a large amount of unused munycia near the body. It was not clear how he died, but the officials said the police did not return the shooting, and the local police chief said the day after the attack that he “pointed out a lot of that” the attacker shot.
Officers have found at least five survivors, over 18 years of survivors, with serious firearm wounds. The sixth person was treated for minor injuries.
Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty
Investigators did not discover the final motive behind the bloodshed. Police said there was no warning before, and they believe the perpetrator acted alone. Authorities have announced that there are no suspicious ties with terrorism at this point.
Swedish Laws on Weapons
The Government and the Right-wing Party of the Swedish Democrats said on Friday that they were planning to move forward with the proposals for the Law on Weapons, including the restriction of an approach to a semi-automatic weapon such as the AR-15, reported the Swedish news agency TT.
Authorities said the scorer had permits for four weapons in Orebbro, three of which were found next to his body. The police seized the district. Officials said only one gun was a weapon like a rifle.
Currently, Swedish laws already include Strict licensing for all ownership of firearms, with reports directly filed with national police forces and potential applicants who need to show that weapons will be used for an acceptable purpose, such as hunting or cracking of the goal, not abusing.
The applicants must also submit previously obtained hunting certificates or aiming of cracking. Hunting certificates require people to undergo training course, while target shooters must be certified as active and experienced club members.
Kicki Nilsson/TT News Agency/AFP/Getty
In a country of approximately 10.5 million people, at the beginning of 2024. There were just over 660,000 registered weapons owners, according to the Swedish news agency TT. These registered owners had about 2 million rifles, objects considered to be fiery weapons and parts of weapons required by permission.
TT reported that 1.6 million of these rifles were registered for hunting and another 176,000 to shoot the goal.
All weapons must be stored in the safe wardrobes approved by the police. Applications for complete automatic weapons or weapons with one hand are allocated only for exceptional reasons, and such permits are generally limited.
Fire weapons licenses are recalled if the weapon is modified to significantly differentiate from its original function.