A man who injured 11 people, one critically, in a rampage at
Ohio State University was of Somali descent and a student on campus, say US
officials.
Abdul Razak Ali Artan, 18, rammed his car into a group of pedestrians at the college then got out and began stabbing people before police shot him dead.
Police
Chief Kim Jacobs said they were investigating whether Monday morning's incident
was a terrorist attack.
The
FBI joined the inquiry at the 60,000-student campus in Columbus.
Artan was a Somali
refugee who was living in the US as a legal permanent resident, US media
report.
Asked
at a news conference whether it could have been a terrorist act, Police Chief
Jacobs said: "I think we have to consider that it is."She
added: "Obviously with the purposeful intent that was noticed - driving on
the sidewalk - we're going look at it from the potential that it was
planned."Artan
studied logistics management in the college of Business at Ohio State, reports
the Columbus Dispatch.
'I was kind of
scared'
Abdul
Razak Ali Artan revealed he was scared of praying in public because of
"everything going on in the media" just three months before his
death.
Artan gave an interview to
university newspaper The Lantern on his first day at Ohio State on 23 August,
telling reporter Kevin Stankiewicz he was concerned about fellow students
reaction.
"I
wanted to pray in the open, but I was scared with everything going on in the
media," he said. "I'm a Muslim, it's not what the media portrays me
to be. If people look at me, a Muslim praying, I don't know what they're going
to think, what's going to happen.
"But,
I don't blame them. It's the media that put that picture in their heads so
they're just going to have it and it, it's going to make them feel
uncomfortable."
The incident began at 10:00 local time on Monday when a vehicle jumped the kerb at the campus, striking pedestrians near Watts Hall, the science and engineering building.
Ohio
State Police Chief Craig Stone said the driver got out of the vehicle and began
stabbing bystanders with a "butcher's knife".
A
policeman who was nearby because of a gas leak shot the driver dead in less
than a minute.
Authorities
identified the officer as 28-year-old Alan Horujko, who has been with Ohio
State University police since 2015.
The
injured included a mix of academic faculty, maintenance staff, and graduate and
undergraduate students.
Campus
police say that CCTV cameras filmed the suspect arriving on campus alone,
indicating that he did not have an accomplice aiding him during the attack.
Student
Martin Schneider said he heard the car's engine revving.
"I thought it
was an accident initially until I saw the guy come out with a knife," he
said.
The
college had warned students in a tweet to "Run Hide Fight", warning
there was an "active shooter", though authorities later said the
attacker did not use a firearm.
Hours
later police declared the scene "secure", lifting the
shelter-in-place order and cancelling classes for the remainder of Monday.
Columbus
Police sent a SWAT team, dog units, negotiators and a helicopter to the scene.
Federal officials
from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also
responded.
In
recent months, federal officials have warned about extremist efforts to recruit
people for knife and car attacks, which are seen as easier for home-grown
radicals to carry out than bombings.
The
Islamic State group has urged sympathisers to use whatever weapons are
available to them to carry out attacks.
It
also called on followers to use vehicles to attack the Thanksgiving Day parade
in New York City over the weekend
Public school
districts near to Ohio State placed their students on lockdown during Monday's
alert.
The
attack came just as students were resuming classes following the Thanksgiving
holiday, and after the university's American football team defeated rival
Michigan in a match that drew over 100,000 people to the Columbus campus on
Saturday.
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