Danish capital hit by second blast in four days

An explosion damaged a police station in Copenhagen
early on Saturday, the second blast to hit the Danish capital in four days.
No one was injured in the blast outside a small
unstaffed police station in the area of Norrebro, just outside the city centre,
Chief Police Inspector Jorgen Bergen Skov said.
On Tuesday, one person was slightly injured in an
explosion outside the Danish Tax Agency's office in what police said was a
deliberate attack.
Skov said Saturday's blast was also a deliberate
act, but it was too early to say whether the two blasts were connected.
"This was not an accident, but a deliberate
act," Skov said, adding that while the investigation was still underway,
nothing suggested it was terror-related.
"These were attacks against buildings, not
people," he said. "But it is too early to say anything about the
motive."
Police were searching for a man seen running from
the scene of the blast, he said.
Serious attacks or violence are rare in the Nordic
country of 5.7 million people that prides itself on a reputation for safety and
social tolerance.