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Dutch police say 3 people are killed in shootings at a university hospital and home in Rotterdam

White cars with blue and reds strips are parked outside a building.
Emergency services attend to the scene at Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on Sept. 28, 2023.
(Associated Press)
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A lone gunman wearing a bulletproof vest opened fire in an apartment and a hospital in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam on Thursday, killing three people, including a 14-year-old girl, police said.

The shooting sent patients and medics fleeing the Erasmus Medical Center in downtown Rotterdam, including some who were wheeled out of the building in beds. Others barricaded themselves into rooms and stuck handwritten signs to windows to show their location.

Police Chief Fred Westerbeke told reporters that the shooter was a 32-year-old student from Rotterdam. He was arrested at the hospital carrying a firearm. His identity was not released, and the motive for the shootings was still under investigation.

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He first killed a 39-year-old woman and seriously injured her 14-year-old daughter at an apartment close to where the suspect lived, Westerbeke said. Police said the girl later died of her injuries.

The shooter then went to the nearby Erasmus Medical Center, where he killed a 43-year-old man, a teacher at the academic hospital, police said. He also started fires at the scenes of both shootings.

The identities of the victims were not released.

The suspect was cooperating with police, Westerbeke said.

Dutch King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima expressed their sympathy on social media. “Our hearts go out to the family and friends of the victims of the violence this afternoon in Rotterdam,” the royal pair wrote. “We also think of everybody who lived in fear during these terrible actions.”

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The Erasmus Medical Center appealed on social media for people not to go to the hospital, but later said it was reopening. It said all appointments scheduled for Friday would go ahead as planned.

There have been scores of small explosions and at homes and businesses across Rotterdam this year, blamed on rival drug gangs. There was no immediate suggestion that Thursday’s shooting was linked to the gangs.

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