Ten days have passed since the mass shooting at Campus Risbergska in Örebro. Ten people were murdered and several injured before the perpetrator Rickard Andersson took his own life.
The first alarm calls until 112 came at 12.33 and an extensive effort by police, health care and emergency services if ongoing deadly violence began.
Nerike’s fire brigade’s event report, which SVT has taken part in, shows new details about the course of events. Including information from alarm calls to SOS Alarm. Minute by minute, the alarm operators receive updates on new shots, injured and where people have barricaded themselves in the 17,000 square meter school building.
Here are some of them:
• At 12.38: A witness at school describes a man “with big weapon”, black clothes and dark blue pants.
• At 12.43: The caller says that a bullet wounded person, shot in the legs, takes shelter inside a preschool near Risbergska.
• At 12.51: “The conversation is broken. A bullet wound. Unclear where the person is. “
• At 12.59: “New caller from the school states that he is shot, says he is at SFI school”. At the same time, another witness says that there are “several who call for help in the corridors”.
• At 13.35: New information about the perpetrator describes that he “has green military clothes”.
• At 13.29: A person “sits locked in toilet and dares not open”. Tells someone heard outside the door.
In addition to the alarm calls with testimonies from within the school, the rescue service’s efforts in the incident report are described.
At 13.58, they got a clear sign from the police that it was “safe to go in and work”.
– Of course, we had wanted to come faster and be more helpful, says Kristoffer Roden, rescue leader during the effort.
Forced to reverse
But 40 minutes later, new announcements came that the rescue service would reverse “as police believe there may be another GM (perpetrator red note) that is not harmless”.
Only after 15 o’clock do the rescue service get the clear sign to approach the school.
– In this situation, the police have started to evacuate people who were trapped in classrooms. A large part of the work is to help people who are more easily injured and shocked to get back towards the ants, says Kristoffer Roden.