-
Five people have been killed and an unknown number of people were injured in a shooting at a youth welfare facility which includes supported accommodation for young mothers in Stade, near Hamburg in northern Germany.
-
Two people have been apprehended at the scene, including the suspected shooter, police confirmed.
-
There is no active danger to the public, police said.
-
The motive for the shooting and the circumstances surrounding the incident remain unclear at this stage.
Local police in Stade have warned against “unconfirmed information” spreading on WhatsApp groups and social media, saying these reports – without specifying what they said – “do not reflect the current officially confirmed information from the police.”
“Please do not forward unverified reports, voice messages, or rumors. This can cause confusion and hinder police operations,” it added.
-
Five people have been killed and an unknown number of people were injured in a shooting at a youth welfare facility which includes supported accommodation for young mothers in Stade, near Hamburg in northern Germany.
-
Two people have been apprehended at the scene, including the suspected shooter, police confirmed.
-
There is no active danger to the public, police said.
-
The motive for the shooting and the circumstances surrounding the incident remain unclear at this stage.
Early pictures from Stade, including video footage shown by Welt TV, show young women with children led by officers away from the scene, and police technicians leaving evidence markets on the pavement.
We will no doubt get more clarity on the incident in due course.
We are now getting first pictures from the scene in Stade, Germany.
We have just got a further update from the Stade police, confirming that five adults were killed, and an unknown number of other people sustained injuries.
“Two suspected perpetrators, including the suspected shooter, were arrested,” it added.
The police said the incident took place at a “youth care facility” in the city, which German media say also include a facility supporting vulnerable mothers with young children. Details are yet to be confirmed.
“Investigations into the background and the exact sequence of events are ongoing,” it said.
There is no active danger to the public.
We are still waiting for a further update from the Stade police.
We know that there are reportedly five people dead after a shooting in Stade near Hamburg in northern Germany, and police have apprehended a suspect.
But we don’t know much more at this stage as the police operation appears to be very much still under way.
The motives or the circumstances of the attack are still unclear, as well as the identities of the affected people.
There are also conflicting reports as to the nature of the place where the shooting happened, with reports saying it is either a youth centre or a mother and child shelter.
We will publish more details here as soon as we know more.
The reported death toll – five dead – has been confirmed by the police to the German news agency DPA and other local media, including ZDF.
The motive and the exact circumstances of the incident are yet to be clarified.
Early local media reporting says the shooting took place at a youth centre, but this is yet to be confirmed.
A police notice issued to the public warns of an ongoing “large-scale operation” in Stade, telling people to leave and avoid the area.
“Please only share official information and do not spread rumours,” it added.
Pivoting to breaking news from Germany, I am looking at reports of a shooting in the German city of Stade.
Stade is located approximately 45 kilometers west of Hamburg in northern Germany.
Five people are reported dead after “numerous” shots were fired, with the main suspect apprehended by the police, local media say.
I will bring you more as soon as we have it.
Europe environment correspondent
Has Europe failed to learn from its past?
The devastation of summer 2003 triggered the first serious attempts to deal with heat, as governments linked early warning systems to rapid response measures for when temperatures rose, such as limiting travel, closing schools and cancelling non-urgent appointments in hospitals.
Research has found such adaptations have proved successful, with mortality rates now far less sensitive to shifts in temperature. If the 2003 heatwave were to strike today with the same strength, a study found in November, the projected death toll would be 75% lower.
But at the same time, heatwaves are growing hotter, longer and more common – and it is entirely unclear if efforts to adapt will keep up with the rising concentrations of planet-heating pollution in the atmosphere.
This year, early warning systems kicked into action before the summer had even begun, as shock May heat swept north-west Europe and shattered the UK’s historical temperature record for May by a full 2C.
Two weeks later, the Europe chief of the World Health Organization (WHO), Hans Kluge, stood in Berlin to announce the update of the WHO’s guidelines for heat health action plans, 18 years after they were first released. Just two weeks have passed since then, and Berlin is facing 40C heat.
Climate breakdown is heating Europe faster than any other continent – the result of local weather patterns and proximity to the rapidly melting Arctic – and the current heatwave is no exception to its effects. A rapid attribution study published on Friday by World Weather Attribution (WWA) found it would have been “virtually impossible” at this time of year just 50 years ago.
Europe environment correspondent
Particularly troubling for human health are the sweltering overnight temperatures reached this week, which the scientists found were about 100 times more likely than in 2003, while the daytime peaks have grown about 10 times more likely.
They ruled out any influence from El Niño, the natural warming weather pattern that recently formed in the Pacific. It will peak in strength toward the end of the year and is likely to make 2027 the hottest on record globally.
For scientists who have long warned that heatwaves are getting worse as carbon pollution rises, the failure to follow expert advice has become tiring.
“There’s a sad inevitability to all of this, with scientists like me trotting out the same quotes year after year,” said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London and co-author of the WWA study, speaking before this week’s records had been broken.
“Yes it’s climate change, yes it’s us, no it’s not El Niño. Simply put, we remain on a one-way trip towards a more dangerous future, and it’s time we hit the brakes.”
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com








