Police shot and wounded a suspect after a stabbing spree in which a man killed two people and wounded six others in the Finnish city of Turku on Friday.

Within hours the force had announced increased police patrols across the country.
"There are eight victims in the stabbing. Two dead and six injured," Turku police tweeted after the assault in a market square. A hospital official told journalists all the victims were adults.
Police shot one suspect in the thigh minutes after the attack at another square nearby, arresting him and confiscating his knife.
His identity has not yet been established, police said four hours after the attack, nor was the motive for the attack clear.
While security forces wrote on Twitter that police were "looking for other possible perpetrators", police told journalists it was likely there was only one attacker.
The stabbing spree comes with Europe on high alert a day after drivers slammed vehicles into pedestrians in two attacks in Spain, killing at least 14 people and injuring more than 100 others. The Islamic State (IS) group has claimed responsibility for the Barcelona attack.
In Turku, images of a body covered in a white blanket were published on some online news sites, including the local daily Turun Sanomat.

Police patrols stepped up

The attack took place in the heart of the port city in southwestern Finland, just after 4:00 pm (1300 GMT) in a bustling neighbourhood.
"The perpetrator stabbed two people on the market square, one of whom came to the aid of the other," police told reporters.
"Then the perpetrator left the square to a busy street and stabbed more people."
Police arrested a suspect minutes later.
One victim died at the scene and the other in hospital, police said.
Bystanders had rushed to the scene to help the victims.
"I saw an old woman, I tried to help her. She was bleeding all over her body," Wali Hashi, who witnessed the attack, told AFP.
"She was wounded to her neck with the knife... I took her aside."
Another witness, who did not want to give his name, told public television YLE: "A young woman screamed really loudly at one corner of the square. We saw a man on the square, with a knife in his hand and he was waving it."
Police said the suspect in custody was being treated in hospital.
Central Turku -- located about 140 kilometres (90 miles) from the capital Helsinki -- was swiftly cordoned off and stores and restaurants closed.
Police also tweeted that they had raised their emergency readiness across the country after the stabbing, increasing security at airports and train stations and putting more police on the streets.
"The number of patrols is being increased, information gathering is intensified," they wrote.
Finland's National Bureau of Investigation was handling the case, and investigators were examining surveillance camera footage from the scene to get a clear picture of events.

 Threat level raised


Prime Minister Juha Sipila tweeted that his government was "following the situation in Turku closely and the police operation underway".
Police refused to comment on whether the stabbing had been terror-related.
"At this stage of our investigations we can't say if it is a matter of terrorism," police told a press conference.
In June, Finland's intelligence and security agency Supo raised the country's terror threat level by a notch, from "low" to "elevated", the second notch on a new four-tier scale.
It said at the time it saw an increased risk of an attack committed by the so-called Islamic State (IS).
"Supo has become aware of more serious terrorism-related projects and plans in Finland," it said.
"Foreign terrorist fighters (who have) left from Finland have gained significant positions within IS in particular and have an extensive network of relations in the organisation," it said in its June assessment.
In 2012, Finland's then-prime minister Jyrki Katainen escaped a knife attack in Turku while campaigning for municipal elections.
The man who approached him carrying a knife was found to be psychologically disturbed and no charges were brought against him.
In late 2016, a local politician and two journalists were shot dead in a Finnish town close to the Russian border, illustrating Finland's struggles to combat gun crime.
Police had quickly arrested a man singled out by witnesses as the killer.
A former capital of Finland, Turku remains a hub for business and culture.

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