STOCKHOLM -- Swedes questioned their country's welcoming immigration policies with pride and pain Sunday after learning an asylum-seeker from Uzbekistan allegedly was behind the truck rampage that killed four people, Stockholm's deadliest extremist attack in years.
The Swedish capital was slowly but resolutely regaining its normal rhythm as details about the 39-year-old suspect in the attack emerged.
Police said he had been ordered to leave Sweden in December because his request for a residence permit had been rejected six months earlier.
Instead, he allegedly went underground, eluding attempts to deport him until a hijacked beer truck raced down a pedestrian street and rammed into an upscale department store Friday.
"It makes me frustrated," Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven told Swedish news agency TT on Sunday.
The suspect, who has been detained on suspicion of terrorist offenses, was known known for having "been sympathetic to extremist organizations," said Jonas Hysing of Sweden's national police.
A second person was arrested on the same potential charge Sunday, and four others were being held by police. None of them has been identified.
Security officials in neighboring Norway, where a 17-year-old asylum-seeker from Russia was detained early Sunday in connection with an explosive device found near a subway station, spoke of the alarming potential for a copycat effect.
"The attacks demonstrate how easy such attacks can be carried out and prove to others that it is possible to make something similar," an official said.
Sweden long has been known for its open-door policy toward migrants and refugees.
But after the Scandinavian country of 10 million took in a record 163,000 refugees in 2015 -- the highest per-capita rate in Europe -- the government has tried to be more selective about which newcomers it allows to stay.
Swedish police said Sunday they had received about 12,500 referrals from the Swedish Migration Board of people who had overstayed their welcome.
The suspect eluded authorities by giving police a wrong address after his residency request was rejected in June, said Hysing, the operative head of the attack investigation.
National coordinator against violent extremism Anna Carlstedt said Friday's attack and the background of the suspect posed "difficult questions."
"Do we somehow need a more repressive policy?" Carlstedt said. "I think it is very important now not to rush into something, to see how we can safeguard this open society and still be able to protect ourselves."
The range of mixed emotions -- fear and fraternity, anger and openness -- also surfaced at memorial services and rallies held Sunday in Stockholm to honor the attack victims.
Lars Holm, a 73-year-old Stockholm resident, was visibly upset after attending a service at Stockholm Cathedral.
"If people who are here seeking asylum and treat us like this, it is not good," Holm said. "So now we have to have more security in our society, but still, we don't like to live in bunkers."
Addressing tens of thousands of people rallying in downtown Sergelstorg square, organizer Rickard Sjoberg noted many in the crowd probably were from out of town.
"But today, we're all Stockholmers," he said.
The four victims killed included a British man, a Belgian woman and two Swedes, authorities in those countries said. Their identities were not released by Swedish officials.
The British government named the Briton as Chris Bevington, an executive at Swedish music-streaming service Spotify. In Brussels, the Belga news agency said the Belgian woman had been reported missing before she was identified by her identity papers and later by DNA testing.
As of Sunday, 10 of the 15 people wounded remained hospitalized, including one child.
Stockholm county spokesman Patrik Soderberg said four of the 10 were considered "seriously" injured and the remaining six, including the child, were slightly injured.
One of the wounded, an 83-year-old Romanian woman who was begging on the city's pedestrian Drottninggatan shopping street when the attack took place, said she was "surprised" that passers-by helped her.
"I thought everyone would run past me and save themselves," Papusa Ciuraru, whose foot was crushed by a boulder displaced by the speeding truck, told the Expressen daily.
The lion-shaped boulders on Drottninggatan are meant as roadblocks and have been put up in several European capitals after a truck attack last year killed 12 people at a Christmas market in Berlin.
Police and Sweden's intelligence have questioned some 500 people as part of the investigation, a senior police officer said. Sweden's SAPO security police said it was working to find "any abettor or network involved in the attack."
The department store that was rammed by the truck apologized Sunday for an announcement that it would reopen two days after the deadly attack to sell damaged goods at a "reduced price."
The Ahlens store described it as "a bad decision" on its Facebook page, saying its motivation "was born out of the idea of standing up for transparency and not allowing evil forces take control of our lives."
The store said it would reopen Monday "without any damaged goods."
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