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Bomb threats disrupt dozens of schools across Hungary, authorities investigate

Hungarian school
Hungarian school Copyright  Noemi Bruzak/MTI via AP
Copyright Noemi Bruzak/MTI via AP
By Marton Munkacsy
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Law enforcement is investigating the threats, believed to have come from the same source, and have taken precautionary measures.

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Emails containing a bomb threat were sent to multiple educational institutions in Hungary on Thursday morning, causing them to temporarily shut down out of precaution, the National Police Headquarters (ORFK) said.

The threats have affected at least 268 schools nationwide, prompting an investigation by the authorities. No bombs have been found at schools searched so far in an ongoing effort to deem all schools safe.

“We will not go to bed today, and the police will not go to bed either, until the police arrive at every Hungarian school where such a threat has been received and inspect the building,” said Kristóf Gál, the ORFK head of communications said at a press conference in Budapest on Thursday.

In the letter described by the police and later made public by domestic outlets, an unidentified person threatened to attack "every gathering place, every landmark" in what they said was a violent extremist plot organised by an unnamed "caliphate".

Minister Head of the Prime Minister's Office Gergely Gulyás confirmed the email's veracity. The contents of the letter could not be independently verified by Euronews.

"What I think is more likely is we're dealing with a mentally ill person," Gulyás said at a press conference on Thursday.

Although the letters were sent through a foreign server, investigators will find the perpetrator, Gulyás said.

Budapest Mayor Gergely Karácsony reacted to the news of the bomb threats in a post on his Facebook page, stating that the Hungarian capital's public transportation company has sent out buses to schools to act as temporary shelters while authorities search the premises.

The Metropolitan Police is working closely with the Budapest Police Headquarters (BRFK) to deal with the situation, Karácsony added.

Hungarian authorities said that they have also reached out for assistance to neighbouring Slovakia, where a similar mass bomb threat happened in recent times.

Over the past two years, a slew of bomb threats, particularly against schools, shopping centres and airports, have affected the Czech Republic, Serbia, Montenegro and Bosnia as well, shutting down operations and causing logistical issues. All of them turned out to be a hoax.

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