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A view of the Square Sainctelette in Brussels. The attack took place outside and in the lobby of the glass-cladded building in the upper left-hand corner. At about 7:15 pm on 16 October 2023, Lassoued opened fire on Swedish football supporters in a taxi at the junction of the Boulevard du Neuvième de Ligne / Negende Linielaan and the Boulevard d'Ypres / Ieperlaan, just off the Square ...
Gysinge, Gästrikland, Sweden: In a series of attacks, a single wolf was believed responsible for 12 deaths and 15 injuries. It was thought that the wolf had escaped from captivity and had lost its fear of humans. [583] 1820 50 people: Estonia [further explanation needed] [587] July 11, 1819 Child†, 4: Predatory: La Ferté, Jura, France
Between 2009–2010, Peter Mangs targeted people in Malmö, Sweden who had dark skin, and who he deemed to be "non-Swedish". Altogether, the attacks killed 2 people and injured 13 others. On 22 July 2011, [19] in Norway, Norwegian Anders Behring Breivik killed 77 people in two consecutive attacks.
A wolf bounty was introduced in Sweden in 1647, after the extermination of moose and reindeer forced wolves to feed on livestock. The Sami extirpated wolves in northern Sweden in organized drives. By 1960, few wolves remained in Sweden, due to the use of snowmobiles in hunting them, with the last specimen being killed in 1966.
1923, March. Pack of wolves. Île-à-la-Crosse, Saskatchewan. "March 16, 1923 Karl Lynn world war veteran and one of the best known trappers and mushers in the north country is believed to have lost his life in a fight with a pack of timber wolves, two hunters reported here today.
The 2011 Norway attacks, also called 22 July (Norwegian: 22. juli) [ 12 ] or 22/7 in Norway, [ 13 ] were two domestic terrorist attacks by far-right extremist Anders Behring Breivik against the government, the civilian population, and a Workers' Youth League (AUF) summer camp, in which a total of 77 people were killed.
Predatory attack on a child in northern Spain, as depicted on a 1914 issue of Le Petit Journal Napad wilków (attack of the wolves) by Józef Chełmoński (1883) at the Museum of Polish Army, Warsaw, Poland. Wolf attacks are injuries to humans or their property by gray wolves. Their frequency varies with geographical location and historical ...
Norway's wolf population is located in the south-east, close to the Swedish border, and consists of around 100 wolves (roughly a third of which cross the border into Sweden). [ 40 ] According to an estimate made in the winter of 2022/2023, Norway was home to 9 wolf packs (6 of them being shared with Sweden) and 7 territorials pairs (3 of them ...