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Dutch police open fire on man with knife at Schiphol airport

By AFP
15 December 2017   |   7:24 pm
Dutch military police on Friday shot and wounded a man armed with a knife, who burst into their office at Amsterdam's busy Schiphol airport, police told AFP.

Police patrol after a man wielding a knife was shot by military police on December 15, 2017 at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam.<br />Dutch military police on december 15 opened fire on a man armed with a knife at Amsterdam’s busy Schiphol airport, they said. “Man at Schiphol shot at by the military police, after he made threats with a knife. Situation safe,” the military police said in a tweet. A second tweet said the “suspect had been overpowered and arrested and taken away”.Evert Elzinga / ANP / AFP

Dutch military police on Friday shot and wounded a man armed with a knife, who burst into their office at Amsterdam’s busy Schiphol airport, police told AFP.

“This afternoon a man came into the office of the Marechaussee (military police) here at Schiphol and threatened my colleagues with a knife,” said police spokesman Dennis Muller.”He was shot in the leg and taken to hospital in Amsterdam.”

The incident triggered panic on the airport’s vast plaza, which is criss-crossed by thousands of people every day making their way to and from the departures and arrivals halls.

A worker at a fast food shop told AFP she saw a man “waving a knife around” before hearing a single shot.

“It was a scary thing to see him waving his knife around,” said the worker, who refused to be identified.

Schiphol airport is one of Europe’s top five busiest air hubs, handling a record 63.6 million passengers in 2016, up from 58 million in 2015.

Muller told AFP the military police did not know the man or anything about him.

“He seemed to be a confused person,” Muller said, adding “our investigators are on the scene to try and determine exactly what his motives were.”

The cavernous plaza, where trains arrive underground and where people can also stop to shop or eat in a large commercial area, was briefly evacuated.

But the airport tweeted later that the plaza was “reopened to the public again although a small part remained closed.

“Air traffic is experiencing no further consequences,” it added.

‘Shots being fired’
AFP correspondents saw that the police office and the Starbucks coffee shop next door had been cordoned off with red-and-white tape, and green-and-white screens guarded by heavily armed military police had been erected to shield the area from curious onlookers.

“At this stage, the situation has returned back to normal. Trains are running again, and planes are departing from the airport,” Muller said.

In a mobile phone video broadcast on the Dutch broadcaster NOS, a man is heard shouting “there are shots being fired” then the sound of three shots echoing in the plaza.

A hospital gurney with someone on it is then seen being wheeled along outside the airport, surrounded by emergency workers.

One cafe worker interviewed by the NOS said everyone “was in a terrible panic” and some of the clients had even sought shelter in their kitchen.

Tom Boelen, general manager of next door restaurant Per Tutti, said he was told by his staff that there was a shooting happening.

“They heard several shots and some of them ran for the exit, while others ran into the kitchen,” he told AFP.

Past scares
Opened in 1916 as a military airport, Schiphol became the country’s primary airport in 1949, lying about nine kilometres (five miles) southwest of the Dutch capital, Amsterdam. It serves as the second main hub for Air France-KLM, and also hosts many budget airlines such as Transavia and EasyJet.

The Netherlands has so far been spared from the slew of terror attacks which have rocked its closest European neighbours in past years.

But amid a number of scares in recent months, and reports that people linked to some of the attacks may have crossed briefly into the country, concerned top Dutch security and intelligence officials have been keeping a wary eye on events.

Schiphol was the scene of a late-night evacuation in April 2016 just a few weeks after the Brussels metro and airport suicide bombings when a drunken, homeless man sparked a security scare at the Dutch airport.And in November 2016, Rotterdam airport was then the target of a reported terror threat, which also turned out to be false.

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