AFP reports that the 57-year-old clergyman was recuperating in hospital on Tuesday after a masked assailant repeatedly hacked him, causing him serious wounds to his face and hands.
It was gathered that the religious leader
was in a stable condition on Tuesday after undergoing an operation on
Monday night, and was soon to be discharged from hospital.
Police
on the matter told newsmen on Tuesday that they were treating the
attack as a murder attempt, but stressed that they did not yet know
whether the attack was a hate crime carried out by anti-Islamic
extremists, or somehow tied up to his position at the mosque.
"It
is too early to say anything about it," Grete Lien Metlid, head of the
violent and sexual crimes unit at the Oslo police said in a press
conference. "It may be a hate crime, but we have no evidence to say
anything more about that now, or about whether the attack was linked to
his work as an imam."
* Inside the Central Jamaat Ahle-Sunnat mosque in Oslo, Norway
Metlid noted that there had been clashes in 2005 and 2006 over his position as imam, which had previously led to violence. She said that she hoped police would be able to start questioning Shah later today.
However,
there are confusion if the Imam had been attacked with an axe or a
knife, as the police officer stated it was "a sharp object".
Police
said that the attacker had been wearing a green and black jacked, a
hooded top, blacking jogging pants and white and grey shoes.
According
to Aftenposten newspaper, Shah was attacked after he left his home 50
metres from the mosque to go and lead the evening prayers.
When
he did not show up, those gathered to pray tried calling his mobile
phone and raised the alarm when he did not answer. By that time, he had
already been able to crawl back into his home, where he was picked up by
an ambulance.
Ghulam Sarwar, the mosque's chairman, said that Shah had been hit on one side of his face, and wounded under one eye.
"He
also had injuries to his fingers and hands, which suggests that he
tried to defend himself with his fists," Sarwar told Aftenposten.
It
was gathered that the mosque has been both the focus of internal
conflict within the Muslim community, and attacks by far-right,
anti-Islamic extremists.
Last September, a pig's head was left outside the mosque on Friday, the day most Muslims go to pray.
The
same month, another of Oslo's mosques, The World Islamic Mission
mosque, received an email threatening a campaign of mosque-burning
across Norway.
READ MORE: https://news.naij.com/68278.html
READ MORE: https://news.naij.com/68278.html
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