Monday, 4 May 2015

Gunmen killed at Dallas event on Prophet Muhammad cartoons

Police have spent several hours inspecting the gunmen's car for explosives
Two gunmen have been shot dead after opening fire outside a conference on cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad in a suburb of Dallas, US police say.
They drove to the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland as the event was ending, and began shooting at a security officer before being killed by police.
The bomb squad has been called in to search their vehicle for explosives.
The event, organised by a group critical of Islam, included a contest for drawings of the Prophet.
One of the keynote speakers was the Dutch politician Geert Wilders, an outspoken critic of Islam in Western societies.
Security had been tight, but Garland police said there had been no credible threats in advance, and it was not immediately clear if the shootings were related to the event.
ABC news reported that one of the suspects had been identified as Elton Simpson, an Arizona man who had been previously investigated on suspicion of terrorism offences.

About 200 people had been attending the Muhammad Art Exhibit when, shortly before it was due to finish at 19:00 (00:00 GMT), they were told of a shooting outside.
One woman at the conference was leaving the building when she said she heard "quick shots" from what she thought was a machine gun.
"Police started running everywhere, they quickly told us to run as fast as we could to get back in the building," she said.
They and people from nearby buildings were later evacuated.
Garland Mayor Douglas Athas told CNN that the "first suspect was shot immediately". "The second suspect was wounded and reached for his backpack. He was shot again."
Security officer Bruce Joiner was taken to hospital after being shot in the ankle, but was later released.
Local police said they have not been yet able to identify the gunmen, whose bodies remain by the car while bomb experts inspect it for explosives.
Joe Harn, a spokesman for the Garland Police Department, warned that the inspection is "a very slow, tedious operation that goes on".
The conference centre was locked down after the shooting 

 
Dutch politician Geert Wilders released a picture of himself with police in SWAT gear which he said was taken just before the attack

Sunday's event was organised by the American Freedom Defense Initiative (AFDI), which is run by controversial blogger and activist Pamela Geller and is listed as an anti-Muslim group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights group.
The conference included a contest that offered a $10,000 (£6,600) prize for a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad.
The Curtis Culwell Center - a school-district owned building for public events - was at the centre of controversy in January, after it was picketed by hundreds of protesters angry that it was hosting an event to raise funds for the building of a local Islamic centre.
Mayor Athas acknowledged there had been a lot of local concern about Sunday's event "which is why we had heightened security in the area".
In a text message to Dutch media, Geert Wilders said Sunday's incident had been an "unacceptable" attack on freedom of expression.
"The only fitting response is: to carry on. But it's not easy," he told Dutch public broadcaster NOS.
In a statement on its Facebook page, the AFDI called it a "war on free speech".
Depictions of the Prophet Muhammad are offensive to many Muslims.
There were widespread protests in 2006 when the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad.
In January this year, 12 people were murdered by two Islamist gunmen at the French magazine Charlie Hebdo, which had published similar cartoons.
And a gathering of free speech activists in the Danish capital Copenhagen was targeted by a gunman in February, killing a film director.

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