IS claims Vienna shooting as Austria mourns
 
 
The Islamic State (IS) group claimed responsibility
Tuesday for a deadly shooting rampage in Vienna, as Austria mourned the victims
of its first major terror attack in decades.
Four people were killed when Kujtim Fejzulai,
described as a 20-year-old IS sympathiser who had spent time in prison, opened
fire with a Kalashnikov in a busy area of the Austrian capital on Monday
evening, the day before the country went into a new coronavirus lockdown.
The IS group -- which has claimed numerous attacks
in Europe -- said a "soldier of the caliphate" was responsible for
the carnage in Vienna, according to its propaganda agency.
Police shot the gunman dead on Monday and later swooped
on 18 different addresses and made 14 arrests as they looked for possible
accomplices and sought to determine if he had acted alone. 
After reviewing CCTV footage of the attack in an
area teaming with bars and restaurants not far from the historic sights of
central Vienna, Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said the video "does not
at this time show any evidence of a second attacker".
On Fejzulai's computer, investigators found
incriminating evidence including a photograph recently posted on Facebook
showing him carrying the automatic weapon and a machete used during the attack.
Police said he was also wearing a fake explosive
belt.
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz condemned the
shooting as a "repulsive terror attack", which he said killed a
waitress, a young passer-by and an older man and woman.
He called on the European Union to fight against
"political Islam" saying it was an ideology that represented a
"danger" to the model of the European way of life, in an interview
published in Germany's Die Welt newspaper.
His government will face questions about how an
individual known to security forces had been able to buy weapons and cause
havoc on the streets of the usually peaceful capital, often listed as having
the world's highest quality of life.
The investigation is spanning several countries,
with Switzerland making two arrests and Macedonia, where Fejzulai has family
roots, cooperating with the Austrian authorities.
The attack came after several Islamist atrocities in
France, including an assault on churchgoers in the Mediterranean city of Nice
and the beheading of a schoolteacher near Paris.
The recent re-publication of cartoons of the Prophet
Mohammed in France has caused new tensions worldwide, sparking protests in some
Muslim-majority countries and calls from several terror groups for their
followers to take revenge. 
Britain on Tuesday upgraded its terrorism threat
level from "substantial" to "severe".
Nehammer said Fejzulai had been convicted and jailed
for a terror offence in April last year for trying to travel to Syria.
The dual Austrian and Macedonian national had then been
admitted to a government-funded de-radicalisation programme and had managed to
secure an early release in December from a 22-month prison sentence.
"The perpetrator managed to fool the
de-radicalisation programme of the justice system, to fool the people in it,
and to get an early release," Nehammer said.
"It was clear that the attacker, despite all
the outward signs of having integrated into society, did exactly the
opposite."
A large swathe of central Vienna was cordoned off
around the location of the shootings as police combed the area.
"It sounded like firecrackers, then we realised
it was shots," one witness told public broadcaster ORF after the attack
began. Another spoke of at least 50 shots being fired.
The small Alpine nation of nine million people had
until now been spared the sort of major attacks that have hit other European
countries such as France, Germany and Britain in the last decade.
The last significant attacks date back to the 1970s
and 1980s and were carried out by pro-Palestinian militants.
"This isn't Berlin and it isn't Paris. We're
perhaps a big city but nothing really bad ever happens here," said hotel
receptionist Sharut Gunduz.
The bloodshed triggered an outpouring of solidarity
from world leaders with French President Emmanuel Macron saying the people of
France shared the "shock and sorrow" of the Austrian people.
Across the country, flags were lowered to half mast
on public buildings and people observed a minute of silence at noon as church
bells rang out.
Kurz, President Alexander Van der Bellen and other
officials took part in a wreath-laying ceremony in honour of the victims.
A total of 22 people were brought to Vienna
hospitals over the course of the night with injuries from the attack, 14 with
serious wounds and three in a critical but stable condition.
Police said an officer was among those hurt.
"The fight against these assassins and those
who instigate them is our common struggle," said Chancellor Angela Merkel.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


