HELSINKI -- A man stabbed eight people Friday in Finland's western city of Turku, killing two of them, before police shot him in the thigh and detained him, police said. Authorities were looking for more potential suspects in the attack.
A suspect -- a man whose identity was not known -- was being treated in the city's main hospital but was in police custody. Security was being stepped up across the Nordic country, Interior Minister Paula Risikko told reporters at a news conference.
Police did not give any information on the two people killed or the conditions of those wounded in downtown Turku, 90 miles west of Helsinki.
Finland's top police chief, Seppo Kolehmainen, said it was too early to link the attack to international terrorism.
"Nothing is known about the motives ... or what precisely has happened in Turku," he said.
It was not known whether Friday's attack was somehow linked to a decision in June by Finland's security agency to raise its threat assessment to the second level of a four-step scale.
The Finnish Security Intelligence Service said the country's "stronger profile within the radical Islamist propaganda" led to the change. It said the Nordic country is considered part of the coalition against the Islamic State group.
The Ilta-Sanomat tabloid said six people were injured in the attack, one man and five women, and a woman with stroller had been attacked by a man with a large knife. Finnish broadcaster YLE said several people were seen lying on the ground in Puutori Square after the attack.
Witness Laura Laine told YLE she was about 65 feet from where the stabbing took place.
"We heard a young woman screaming. We saw a man on the square and a knife glittered. He was waving it in the air. I understood that he had stabbed someone," Laine was quoted as saying.
Finland's government was closely monitoring the police investigation into the attack, Prime Minister Juha Sipila said.
"Police have told us not to go to the city center, so we are in this coffee shop a few blocks away," said Vanessa Deggins, an American studying business at one of Turku's three universities, told The Associated Press. She didn't witness the attack, but heard sirens going past.
"This is a safe country by American standards. I have gone home alone at 2-3 a.m. ... I feel safe," she said.
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