A shooting incident took place at a shopping center in Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, near the venue of a scheduled Sunday night Harry Styles concert.

Responding to the incident, Styles wrote in a Snapchat message, “My team and I pray for everyone involved in the Copenhagen shopping mall shooting. I am shocked. Love H.”

As part of his “Love On Tour,” Styles was scheduled to perform on Sunday night at a venue across the street from the mall where the shooting took place. His show, which was scheduled to begin at 8 pm local time, was officially cancelled by the direction of local authorities, although a previous report by the PA agency stated that the concert was to go ahead as scheduled.    

Also read: Copenhagen shooting: Shots fired in mall near Harry Styles’ concert venue, suspect in custody

He has till now performed in Oslo, Norway, Stockholm, Sweden and Hamburg, Germany in the Europe leg of his tour.

Copenhagen Police reported that officers reacted to allegations of a shooting at Field’s shopping mall.

According to the agency, multiple people have been hit by gunshots, and the public is advised to avoid the area. Police later stated that a suspect had been apprehended but did not provide any other information.

The agency requested anyone with video of the incident or who witnessed what occurred to call 411. A strong police presence remained in the area, although no casualties were reported.

A video showed dozens of people scrambling away from the mall on the street.

Denmark has some of Europe’s tightest gun prohibitions. The numbers detailed by Gunpolicy.org reveal Denmark’s cellar-low levels of gun deaths, with less than two individuals killed by weapons for every 100,000 Danish citizens from 1998 to 2011. In comparison, the United States had a rate of little more than 10 gun deaths per 100,000 citizens in 2013, which makes sense given how much larger the stockpile is – America leads the world in gun ownership, whereas only 12 out of every 100 Danes own firearms.