Explosion Hits Police Station in Sweden

Explosion Hits Police Station in Sweden
Police forensics work outside the police station in Helsingborg, on Oct. 18, 2017, after a powerful explosion occurred at the main entrance. (Johan Nilsson/AFP/Getty Images)
John Smithies
10/18/2017
Updated:
10/18/2017

An explosion has hit a police station in the southern Swedish city of Helsingborg, early on Wednesday morning.

Although nobody was injured, much of the building was damaged by the blast.

Sweden’s National Police Commissioner, Dan Eliasson, told Swedish media outlet TT that the explosion was very serious.

“An attack on the police is not just an attack against society, but on everyone’s safety,” he said.

Nobody was injured in the explosion, which occurred shortly after midnight local time and also shattered windows in a neighbouring building, police said in a statement on October 18, 2017. (JOHAN NILSSON/AFP/Getty Images)
Nobody was injured in the explosion, which occurred shortly after midnight local time and also shattered windows in a neighbouring building, police said in a statement on October 18, 2017. (JOHAN NILSSON/AFP/Getty Images)

One local resident told newspaper Helsingborgs Dagblad: “I was in my kitchen and felt the apartment shake. It felt as if someone had thrown something at my balcony.”

The entrance to the police station was damaged, along with the inside of the building.

Lennart Linderos from the local emergency services said: “The whole entrance has been blown away. The windows are shattered and there’s damage to the doors themselves.”

A police officer stands guard outside a security perimeter set around the area surrounding the police station in Helsingborg, on October 18, 2017, after a powerful explosion at the main entrance. (JOHAN NILSSON/AFP/Getty Images)
A police officer stands guard outside a security perimeter set around the area surrounding the police station in Helsingborg, on October 18, 2017, after a powerful explosion at the main entrance. (JOHAN NILSSON/AFP/Getty Images)

Police press officer Åsa Emanuelsson said investigations would continue on Wednesday, according to TT.

So far, the cause of the blast has not been established.