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Police say Portugal Muslim center knife attack not terror-related


Investigators said Wednesday they had uncovered no indication a knife attack that left two women dead at a Lisbon Islamic center was terror-related.
The alleged assailant, identified as an Afghan refugee, may have suffered a mental health crisis before the violence on Tuesday that ended with officers shooting and wounding him, police said.
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“There is no indication that this is a terrorist attack” or involved the radicalization of the suspect, said judicial police chief Luis Neves.
“What may be involved here, but only a psychiatric evaluation can determine it, is that it was a mental crisis,” Neves said, adding the inquiry was ongoing.
According to witnesses, the suspect was taking a language class at the Ismaili Muslim center on Tuesday when his behavior changed suddenly after taking a phone call.
A teacher was attacked and then two women who worked at the center were fatally wounded before the assailant was shot by police. The suspect was in hospital on Wednesday.
Investigators have managed to trace the suspect’s route from his home nation to his arrival in Greece, where his wife died in a fire.
The alleged perpetrator, a father of three young children, arrived in Portugal in 2021 and planned to travel to Germany in the coming days with them, said Neves.
The Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims, generally known as the Ismailis, belong to the Shia branch of Islam, according to their website.
The Ismaili Muslims are a “culturally diverse community” of around 15 million people living in over 25 countries around the world, it says.
Read more:
Two women killed in knife attack at Muslim Ismaili center in Portugal’s Lisbon
Two held in alleged plot to attack Jewish restaurant in Greece
UK raises terror threat level in Northern Ireland ahead of Biden visit

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