Copenhagen agency that made SAS ad targeted with 'hoax' bomb threat
Police in central Copenhagen have now re-opened a road in the city following a bomb threat against an advertising company. The alarm turned out to be false.
The advertising company, & Co., received the bomb threat on Thursday morning via email.
Copenhagen Police subsequently blocked off Adelgade, where the firm is located, and later part of Gothersgade.
But the threat appears to have been an empty one.
Shortly before noon, Copenhagen Police confirmed on social media that the cordon of the area had been lifted after no bomb was found.
“This morning we investigated a building in Adelgade in the Inner City following a bomb threat to a company. We did not find anything of interest to police and are concluding work at the location,” Copenhagen Police tweeted.
Vi har i formiddag undersøgt en bygning i Adelgade i Indre By efter en bombetrussel mod en virksomhed. Vi fandt ikke noget af politimæssig interesse og er nu færdige på stedet. Afspærringen er ophævet, og folk er ved at blive lukket ind i bygningen igen #politidk
— Københavns Politi (@KobenhavnPoliti) February 13, 2020
The company in question, & Co., developed a video commercial for airline SAS which was subject of a fierce backlash on social media on Wednesday.
READ ALSO: Why pulled SAS ad has reignited tired 'What is Scandinavian?' debate
After asking "What is truly Scandinavian?", the video's narrator goes on to say the answer to that question is "absolutely nothing".
Subsequently, the non-Scandinavian national origins of several things dear to the Nordics are pointed out: including democracy (Greece), rye bread (Turkey), open sandwiches (Netherlands), Danish pastries (Austria), liquorice (China), windmills (Persia), and both cycling and midsummer (Germany).
The commercial was pulled from SAS’ Facebook and YouTube pages on Wednesday after a backlash from social media users and suspicions of a coordinated cyberattack against the company.
Since then, the airline has stated that it would re-release a "shorter and clearer" version of the video and said that the message of the campaign had been misunderstood.
Following the alert on Thursday morning, police were initially reported to be investigating “suspicious circumstances” in Adelgade. That this was in fact a bomb threat against an advertising company was confirmed subsequently.
“A company has received threats. I cannot go into further detail,” duty officer Henrik Brix said at 8:30am.
Several police patrol cars and a personnel van were sent to the scene. An ambulance and a fire truck were also at the location.
A bomb disposal unit in protective suits also arrived at Adelgade during the morning as police diverted the public from the area.
People who were evacuated from buildings in the area as a result of the incident can now return to their offices and apartments.
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The advertising company, & Co., received the bomb threat on Thursday morning via email.
Copenhagen Police subsequently blocked off Adelgade, where the firm is located, and later part of Gothersgade.
But the threat appears to have been an empty one.
Shortly before noon, Copenhagen Police confirmed on social media that the cordon of the area had been lifted after no bomb was found.
“This morning we investigated a building in Adelgade in the Inner City following a bomb threat to a company. We did not find anything of interest to police and are concluding work at the location,” Copenhagen Police tweeted.
Vi har i formiddag undersøgt en bygning i Adelgade i Indre By efter en bombetrussel mod en virksomhed. Vi fandt ikke noget af politimæssig interesse og er nu færdige på stedet. Afspærringen er ophævet, og folk er ved at blive lukket ind i bygningen igen #politidk
— Københavns Politi (@KobenhavnPoliti) February 13, 2020
The company in question, & Co., developed a video commercial for airline SAS which was subject of a fierce backlash on social media on Wednesday.
READ ALSO: Why pulled SAS ad has reignited tired 'What is Scandinavian?' debate
After asking "What is truly Scandinavian?", the video's narrator goes on to say the answer to that question is "absolutely nothing".
Subsequently, the non-Scandinavian national origins of several things dear to the Nordics are pointed out: including democracy (Greece), rye bread (Turkey), open sandwiches (Netherlands), Danish pastries (Austria), liquorice (China), windmills (Persia), and both cycling and midsummer (Germany).
The commercial was pulled from SAS’ Facebook and YouTube pages on Wednesday after a backlash from social media users and suspicions of a coordinated cyberattack against the company.
Since then, the airline has stated that it would re-release a "shorter and clearer" version of the video and said that the message of the campaign had been misunderstood.
Following the alert on Thursday morning, police were initially reported to be investigating “suspicious circumstances” in Adelgade. That this was in fact a bomb threat against an advertising company was confirmed subsequently.
“A company has received threats. I cannot go into further detail,” duty officer Henrik Brix said at 8:30am.
Several police patrol cars and a personnel van were sent to the scene. An ambulance and a fire truck were also at the location.
A bomb disposal unit in protective suits also arrived at Adelgade during the morning as police diverted the public from the area.
People who were evacuated from buildings in the area as a result of the incident can now return to their offices and apartments.
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