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Poland charges three men with planning school attack inspired by Norway’s Breivik

WARSAW, June 12 (Reuters) – Poland has charged three 19-year-old men suspected of gathering pyrotechnic materials and planning terrorist actions, including an attack on a school inspired by mass-killers such as Norwegian Anders Breivik, the interior ministry said on Thursday.

“It appears that they were fascinated by the ideology that spreads terrorism, by these serial killers who, as in the case of Norway, killed several dozen people,” ministry spokesman Jacek Dobrzynski told reporters.

“They apparently sought to do something similar here in our country,” he added.

In Norway’s worst peacetime atrocity, Breivik, an anti-Muslim neo-Nazi, killed 77 people in 2011. He first killed eight with a car bomb in Oslo and then gunned down 69, most of them teenagers, at a Labour Party youth camp on Utoeya island.

Dobrzynski declined to comment on local media reports that the three suspects’ plan had been to attack a school in the northern Polish city of Olsztyn.

Earlier, Dobrzynski wrote on social media platform X that the suspects had been collecting information on firearms handling, shooting postures, and combat operations in open areas and indoors. They attended shooting ranges and conducted military-tactical training, an investigation in Olsztyn showed.

Unlike some other European nations, Poland has not experienced a terrorist attack in its modern history.

The decision to charge the three men in Poland comes as Austria mourns the 10 victims of a 21-year-old gunman at his former high school in the city of Graz, in one of the worst outbreaks of violence in that country’s modern history. The gunman, whose motive remains unclear, also killed himself.

Incident Details

Type of Incident: Arrest
Date of Incident: June 12, 2025
City:
Country: Poland

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About Sentinel

SENTINEL is a European project funded by the European Commission and led by the Security and Crisis Centre (SACC by EJC), the security arm of the European Jewish Congress. It brings together the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism (ICCT), national-level Jewish communities from Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, and Spain, the European Union of Jewish Students, with the support of the Italian Carabinieri and the Police Presidium of the Czech Republic.

The project is designed to strengthen the protection of Jewish places of worship across the European Union through a coordinated set of activities over a three-year period.

SENTINEL will harness AI-enhanced open-source intelligence to monitor and assess current, emerging, and future threats. It will also equip Jewish communities with practical tools, including a mobile security application with a panic button and an interactive map built on real-time incident data.

Training and capacity-building are at the core of the project. These include scenario-based security exercises, crisis management seminars, and both in-person and online training sessions for community security trustees. SENTINEL will also organise EU-wide and local conferences to foster collaboration between Jewish communities, public authorities, and law enforcement agencies.

Complementing these efforts, national and local workshops will promote knowledge-sharing and preparedness, alongside pilot training programmes for law enforcement. A dedicated podcast series will help raise awareness by exploring threat assessments and potential responses.

With its wide-reaching and inclusive approach, SENTINEL will directly benefit to Jewish communities across 23 EU Member States, enhancing resilience, strengthening preparedness, and building long-term cooperation with law enforcement to meet today’s evolving security challenges.