Police in the Danish capital of Copenhagen were warning residents to stay of the streets early Sunday after two shootings within hours of each other left at least one person dead and six others wounded.
It was unclear whether the two shootings were connected, police said in an online statement.
The second incident took place about 10 hours after a deadly terror attack. In the latest incident, shots were fired near a synagogue, police said.
One person was wounded by a shot to the head and two police officers were wounded, police said. There were no details on how serious the injuries were.
Police sad the gunman ran from the scene. The shooter was a man dressed in a light gray jacket, black pants and black shoes.
Earlier, a gunman stormed a building where controversial cartoonist Lars Vilks and his supporters had gathered, killing a man and wounding three police officers before fleeing, police said.
Helle Merete Brix — founder of the Lars Vilks Committee, created two years ago in support of the Swedish cartoonist whose portrayals of the Prophet Mohammed angered many in the Muslim world — told CNN that security personnel on site moved her and others to safe areas after shots rang out.
She and Vilks ended up in a storage room together, holding hands, until police told them it was OK to come out.
“We have never taken any chances,” Brix said, referring to the heavy security from police, Danish intelligence services and Vilks’ own security guards at this and other committee events. “What we have so much been frightened would happen happened.”
After the attack, what appeared to be the man, dressed in dark clothes, carjacked a civilian’s dark Volkswagen Polo and drove away, Danish police said. That vehicle was found between two train stations.
Copenhagen police issued this photo of an individual in connection with Saturday's terror attack.
Copenhagen police issued this photo of an individual in connection with Saturday’s terror attack.
The gunman remained at large Saturday night. Police initially had said there were two shooters. The discrepancy was caused by chaos in the aftermath of the incident, Copenhagen police spokesman Steen Hansen said.
The 40-year-old man who was killed hasn’t been identified. Nor have authorities identified the three wounded law enforcement officers — two with Danish intelligence and one police officer — though investigator Joergen Skov did say none of them suffered serious injuries.
Given Islamist extremists’ documented threats against Vilks and their willingness to act on similar threats — as proven last month in France — Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt said, “Everything points to … the shooting in Oesterbro (being) a political assassination and therefore a terror attack.”
Thorning-Schmidt vowed that “all resources will be used to find (those responsible) and bring them before a judge” for an attack she said filled her “with deep anger.”
“We have some difficult days ahead,” the Prime Minister said. “… But in Denmark, we will never bow to violence.”
‘We were just hiding … and hoping for the best’
About 30 people — including Vilks and French Ambassador to Denmark Francois Zimeray, who tweeted later that he is “still alive in the room” — went through airport-level security to get into Saturday’s event at a theater building located in what Brix described as a “very peaceful area” of the Danish capital.
But it didn’t last long, with noise erupting just a few minutes in.
Dennis Meyhoff Brink, a satire researcher and Danish university professor, said he heard about 30 shots at about 3:30 p.m. (9:30 a.m. ET), as well as someone yelling in a foreign language.
“Everybody, of course, panicked in the room and tried to run,” Brink told CNN. “… We were just hiding … and hoping for the best.”
The attacker made it into the lobby but apparently got no farther, said Brix, a journalist and literary critic. She recalled how one man there “acted very quickly and courageously” by pushing a woman down to the ground, then putting himself on top of her so she wouldn’t get shot.
Bodyguards returned fire, the Copenhagen police official said.
At one point, two people came running into the meeting room — one of them bleeding from the leg, after having apparently been shot — to “tell us to calm down,” Brink said.
Sirens could be heard 10 to 15 minutes after the shots, at which point Brink said “we started to feel more safe.” The discussion on free speech even resumed, though eventually all those at the event were bused to a local police station.
Copenhagen police later tweeted a picture of the suspect, covered up and dressed in dark clothes, wanted in connection with the attack.
“We are investigating this as a terror attack,” said Skov, the police official, noting that authorities are taking into account that both the French ambassador and Vilks attended Saturday’s event. “There is an extremely large presence of police in Copenhagen right now.”
A target since cartoon of Mohammed with dog’s body
Danes in Copenhagen and beyond quickly got support from around the world, including from the mayor of Paris — who just more than a month ago lived this same nightmare during the massacre at the offices of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in her city.
“In the name of Parisians,” Mayor Anne Hidalgo tweeted, “I express my full support.”
Like Charlie Hebdo editor Stephane “Charb” Charbonnier, Vilks was one of nine faces on a “Most Wanted” graphic published by al Qaeda’s Inspire magazine for “crimes against Islam.” Others include a pair of Danish journalists who published 12 cartoons depicting Mohammed in the Jyllands-Posten newspaper; Florida pastor Terry Jones, who burned a Quran; and “Satanic Verses” author Salman Rushdie.
Because of that, Brix said, “there’s no doubt” the Copenhagen event was targeted because of Vilks, who has “not been able to live a normal life” for years, according to the committee.
“This is … why we set up the committee: to support Mr. Vilks and support his right to freedom of speech,” Brix said.
Vilks became a target after his 2007 cartoon depicting Mohammed with the body of a dog — an animal that conservative Muslims consider unclean.
In a CNN interview later that year from his home in rural Sweden, Vilks said the drawing was calculated to elicit a reaction.
“It should be possible to insult all religions in a democratic way,” he said then. “If you insult one (religion), then you should insult the other ones.”
CNN’s Kim Norgaard, Margot Haddad , Pierre Meilhan, Paul P. Murphy and Lucy Pawle contributed to this report.