Swiss say two arrested men were friends of Vienna gunman

Chancellor of Austria Sebastian Kurz places a candle at the scene of a terrorist attack in Vienna. (AFP)
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Updated 04 November 2020
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Swiss say two arrested men were friends of Vienna gunman

  • Swiss police arrested two men, aged 18 and 24, on Tuesday in the town of Winterthur, 20 kilometers from the border with Germany
  • Both men, whose names have not been released, are already the subject of two criminal cases being prosecuted by the Swiss attorney general’s office

ZURICH: Swiss authorities confirmed on Wednesday that two men arrested near Zurich were “obviously friends” of a gunman who killed four people in a shooting rampage in Vienna and said police were investigating the full extent of their relationship with him.

Austrian police shot dead the gunman soon after he opened fire on Monday night on crowded bars in the city center. They identified him as Kujtim Fejzulai, 20, a convicted extremist who had dual Austrian and North Macedonian nationality.

Swiss police arrested two men, aged 18 and 24, on Tuesday in the town of Winterthur, which has become a focus of concern over incidents of radicalism in recent years. Austrian police have arrested 14 people as they try to establish whether Fejzulai had any accomplices.

Swiss Justice Minister Karin Keller-Sutter, in a panel discussion shown on the St. Galler Tagblatt newspaper’s website, said the two arrested men were “obviously friends” of the gunman. She said they had met “in person” but did not say when.

“The suspect in Vienna and the two men who were arrested in Winterthur knew each other,” a spokesman for Keller-Sutter’s ministry told Reuters in an email on Wednesday. “Authorities are investigating in close coordination the nature of their relationship.”

Both men, whose names have not been released, are already the subject of two criminal cases being prosecuted by the Swiss attorney general’s office (OAG) and which were opened in 2018 and 2019. The older man is a suspect in one of those cases.

Winterthur, once a prominent industrial center about 20 kilometers from the border with Germany, was the site of a now-shuttered mosque that officials said had attracted preachers who espoused “hate speech.”

Several young people from the Winterthur area who were linked to the mosque traveled to Syria to fight with Daesh. Membership and support of the militant group is outlawed in Switzerland.

In September, a man Swiss media dubbed the “Emir of Winterthur” and described as a leading militant in Switzerland, was sentenced to 50 months in prison for ties to Daesh.

Switzerland has largely been spared extremist violence, but authorities are concerned that the kind of attacks seen in neighboring France, Germany and now Austria could also occur on Swiss territory.

The OAG said on Wednesday that a fatal stabbing of a Portuguese man in September in the town of Morges, in western Switzerland, was still being investigated for a possible “terrorist motive.”
A Swiss-Turkish national has been arrested.


Pro-Palestine protest planned in Sydney against Israeli President Herzog’s visit

Updated 09 February 2026
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Pro-Palestine protest planned in Sydney against Israeli President Herzog’s visit

  • Herzog is visiting Australia this ‌week following an invitation from Australian Prime ‍Minister Anthony Albanese in the aftermath ‍of the deadly shooting at Bondi Beach

SYDNEY: Pro-Palestine demonstrators plan to rally in Sydney on Monday to protest the visit by Israeli President Isaac Herzog, as authorities declared his visit a major event and ​deployed thousands of police to manage the crowds.
Police have urged the protesters to gather at a central Sydney park for public safety reasons, but protest organizers said they plan to rally at the city’s historic Town Hall instead.
Police have been authorized to use rarely invoked powers during the visit, including the ability to separate and move crowds, restrict their entry to certain ‌areas, direct ‌people to leave and search vehicles.
“We’re hoping ‌we ⁠won’t ​have to ‌use any powers, because we’ve been liaising very closely with the protest organizers,” New South Wales Police Assistant Commissioner Peter McKenna told Nine News on Monday.
“Overall, it is all of the community that we want to keep safe ... we’ll be there in significant numbers just to make sure that the community is safe.”
About 3,000 police ⁠personnel will be deployed across Sydney, Australia’s largest city.
Herzog is visiting Australia this ‌week following an invitation from Australian Prime ‍Minister Anthony Albanese in the aftermath ‍of the deadly shooting at Bondi Beach.
He is expected ‍to meet survivors and the families of 15 people killed in the December 14 shooting during a Jewish Hanukkah celebration at Sydney’s Bondi Beach.
In a statement, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry Co-Chief Executive Alex ​Ryvchin said Herzog’s visit “will lift the spirits of a pained community.”
Herzog’s visit has drawn opposition from pro-Palestine groups, ⁠with protests planned in major cities across Australia, and the Palestine Action Group has launched a legal challenge in a Sydney court against restrictions placed on the expected protests.
“A national day of protest will be held today, calling for the arrest and investigation of Isaac Herzog, who has been found by the UN Commission of Inquiry to have incited genocide in Gaza,” the Palestine Action Group said in a statement.
The Jewish Council of Australia, a vocal critic of the Israeli government, released an open letter on Monday ‌signed by over 1,000 Jewish Australian academics and community leaders, urging Albanese to rescind Herzog’s invitation.