Brödhörn Terror Incident

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Brödhörn Terror Incident
BrödhörnTerrorIncident.jpeg
Reporters & Police ontop of Brödhörn coffee shop across the street from the Båtvik Regional Bank.
Date1972–1972
Location
Båtvik, Blostland
Result Police Victory
Belligerents
Järnflotten Terrorists:
Järnflotten
Police:
Brödhörn Police
Commanders and leaders
Sebastian Malmström  Cheif Forslund
Strength
8 23
Casualties and losses
5 Killed None Killed or Wounded

The Brödhörn Terror Incident was a bank robbery, terrorist attack, and hostage crisis best known as the watershed event for the 1970s Blostlandic Political Crisis which rocked the then Folkets Landpartiet government. It occurred at Brödhörn in Båtvik, Blostland, on September 3rd 1972 and was the first criminal event in Blostland to be covered by live television. Sebastian Malmström was a former criminal who had been active in the far right political world; he had managed to create his own functionalist terrorist cell which he planned to fund by by robbing a bank and taking hostages. During the robbery 5 hostages would be taken and almost 5 million dollars would be stolen, police response would be quicker than anticipated by the terrorists who would barracked themselves inside the building as a response. In the following negotiations, Blostlandic Minister of Justice Bob Olsson allowed the terrorists multiple occasions to spread their propaganda on live news. Though the Minister was promised that they would surrender afterwards the terrorists went back on their agreement further deteriorating the situation. Most famously, the terrorists messages would attempt to embolden the Blostlandic far right enough to launch spontaneous uprisings across the country. This did little to help the terrorists though far right rally’s and riots would follow not long after. Police finally mounted a sudden attack six days into the crisis, killing 5 of the heavily armed terrorists including Malmström himself. The event would come as a dark reminder of the far right coming directly after the government's decision to rehabilitate the monarchy for their part in the Great War.

Events

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Aftermath

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In popular culture

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