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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Andy Gregory

Amsterdam hostage situation: Apple Store captive rescued after gunman’s five hour stand-off with police

Laurens Bosch/ANP/AFP via Getty Images

A gunman stormed an Apple store in central Amsterdam, holding a man hostage for several hours in a tense stand-off with police.

Gunshots were reported by multiple witnesses in the busy Leidseplein area early on Tuesday evening, as footage shared on social media showed a hooded man inside the store holding what appeared to be a gun to the hostage’s head.

After a stand-off lasting nearly five hours, during which the suspect is said to have shot at law enforcement, Amsterdam Police announced the hostage-taker had left the building and in custody.

Police said they “managed to stop the hostage-taker by hitting him as he ran” from the store, and footage showed him being struck by a car at high speed. He was not found to be carrying explosives and was taken to hospital.

Armed police at the scene in the Leidseplein area of Amsterdam (Laurens Bosch/ANP/AFP via Getty Images)

The hostage is safe, police said, adding that they have since been able to bring “even more people who were in the building” to safety. Four people were later revealed to have hidden in a cupboard, unknown to the perpetrator.

Prior to the gunman’s capture, police said that dozens of people had been allowed to leave the Apple Store since the situation began, adding that these individuals would give witness statements at a police station and would receive victim support aftercare.

In total, 70 people were said to have been brought to safety.

Police said the suspect is a 27-year-old from Amsterdam. While inside the store, he made contact with local broadcaster AT5, which reported that he had demanded €200m in cryptocurrencies and threatened to blow himself up.

The incident prompted a vast law enforcement response, with armed officers, specialist units and a helicopter surrounding the store in the popular square, which is ringed by bars and restaurants and is close to one of the city’s main shopping streets.

The area was cordoned off, and local residents and those nearby were urged to stay indoors and to exercise restraint in publishing further footage, so as not to compromise the police operation and the safety of anyone held hostage.

“I had to run for my life,” one witness told AT5, which was broadcasting live from outside the store.

“I was standing on the zebra crossing opposite the apple store. An employee walked out in panic with a walkie-talkie yelling: ‘Robbery.’

“At that moment the penny hadn't dropped yet and I was about to cross the zebra crossing opposite the entrance to the Apple store. And that's when I heard gunshots inside.”

The Netherlands’ largest city saw a spate of four armed robberies of mobile phone stores in 2021, prompting some stores to remove most of their phone supplies, which were being targeted. However, none of the robberies had been in the city centre.

Gun violence is not uncommon in the Netherlands, but hostage takings are extremely rare.

In 2015 a man with a gun broke into a TV studio demanding screen time. No one was injured and the man was later convicted of hostage taking.

Additional reporting by agencies

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