Villach knife attacks were injured by teenagers and five people.

A 14 -year -old boy died and five people were seriously injured by a sword attack in southern Austria.

The police said the suspect was a 23 -year -old Syrian asylum applicant who was detained at the site of Villach, a village near Italy and Slovenia.

The police have not yet established their motives, but they are related to extremist experts in the investigation, the spokesman told the BBC News.

This incident took place at about 16:00 local time (15:00 GMT) near the main square of the village. Two out of five injured people were in a serious state of Saturday evening.

The police said the deliveryman who drove the car to the attacker helped prevent more injuries.

The driver, who is also a Syrian, said he witnessed the attack while driving and intentionally hit Knifeman.

The suspect was soon arrested by two female police officers. As of Saturday evening, he is still interrogated, the police said.

Some witness reports initially showed their potential second attackers, and the police closed the train trip in the aftermath of the attack.

Local police, however, were convinced that only one Knifeman participated in the BBC News.

According to the Austrian law, the attacker’s identity was not released, but the police confirmed that he was a 23 -year -old Syrian who lived locally.

He was temporarily licensed and was waiting for a decision to apply for asylum.

The police said four people were initially injured, but the fifth person later suffered a minor injury.

The identity of the killed teenagers has not yet been disclosed.

This attack has been seen for the first time in the first Liberal Party, which occurred in the national debate and political crisis of asylum law after last year’s election.

But it did not form a coalition governmentAustrian President Alexander Van Der Belen is weighed on whether to call snap elections, form a minority government, or invite other parties or experts to try and establish administration.

Herbet Kickl, head of the Freedom Party, seized the villa huge attacks, saying that Austria needed “a strict crackdown on asylum.”

Peter Kaiser of the Center -Left Social Democratic Party describes the attack, the governor of Carinthia, the area where Villach is located, as “an unimaginable aversion.”

He urged the government and the European Union to strengthen the asylum policy, saying that it should not cause “hatred” reactions.