A man
climbed onstage and attempted to fire a gas pistol Saturday at the leader of
the country’s ethnic Turkish political party while he was giving a speech at
his party’s annual conference in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.
The gun misfired, according to a BBC report citing Bulgarian officials, and Ahmed Dogan, the
leader of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms, was not harmed. Video of the
incident shows Mr. Dogan pushing the gunman’s hand, then diving away as other
people at the conference wrestle the man to the floor, then punch and kick him
repeatedly. The gun, a small gas pistol, lies nearby at the feet of shocked
onlookers.
“A gas pistol is a nonlethal weapon used for
self-defense,” The Associated Press reported, “but experts say when fired from close range it can
cause life-threatening injuries.”
The
gunman was arrested, the news agency said, identifying him as “25-year-old
Oktai Enimehmedov, a Bulgarian national and ethnic Turk, from the coastal city
of Burgas.” The motive for the attack was not immediately clear. The report
said the assailant was also carrying two knives.
Mr. Dogan’s party represents ethnic Turks and other
Muslims, according
to Reuters, who make up “12 percent of
Bulgaria’s 7.3 million-strong population.”
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