Police kill axe-wielding Iranian hostage taker on train in Switzerland
Swiss police said a 32-year-old Iranian asylum seeker armed with an axe and a knife held 15 hostages on a train in western Switzerland for almost four hours until police stormed the train and killed the man late on February 8 evening, Swiss Info reports.
The hostage-taking began around 6.35 pm, said Vaud police.
The assailant, armed with an axe and a knife, forced the train driver to leave his post to join the 14 passengers in the train, which had stopped with its doors closed at the Essert-sous-Champvent station, between Baulmes and Yverdon-les-Bains.
“As the hostage-taker rushed with his axe in the direction of the intervention group, a police officer used his weapon to protect the hostages, fatally hitting the perpetrator,” said Sauterel. The man died on the spot, despite the presence of a doctor in the police intervention team. The police said they acted according to the principle of self-defence.
Everyone on the train was released safely. They were looked after on site by a health team before being transported by bus to a police centre in Yverdon.
The hostages and their families were supported by emergency support teams and a psychological unit. They were interviewed for the investigation at the end of the evening.
According to initial information, the 32-year-old man is an Iranian asylum seeker assigned to canton Neuchâtel who speaks Farsi and English. A Farsi-speaking interpreter took part in the negotiations.
The Vaud Public Prosecutor's Office has opened a criminal investigation. “The man's motivations have not been established, nor his psychological state,” said Attorney General Eric Kaltenrieder. It is also unclear where the hostage taker got on the train.
This intervention required over 60 police officers and around 30 rescue workers.