A prominent Dutch crime reporter who was rushed to hospital after being shot on the street in central Amsterdam yesterday evening remains in a serious condition, police said.
Peter R. de Vries - a celebrity journalist in The Netherlands known for speaking on behalf of crime victims - was "fighting for his life", Amsterdam mayor Femke Halsema told a news conference.
Eyewitnesses told local media that the 64-year-old journalist and TV presenter was shot up to five times, including once in the head.
Police said three people had been arrested, among them the suspected shooter, but gave no details on the possible reasons for the attack.
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte told a press conference in The Hague the attack was "shocking and inconceivable".
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"It's an attack on a courageous journalist and by extension an attack on the freedom of the press, which is so essential for our democracy and rule of law," he said.
Charles Michel, President of the European Council, condemned the shooting as a "crime against journalism and an attack on our values of democracy and rule of law".
He wrote on Twitter: "We will relentlessly continue to defend the freedom of the press."

Mr De Vries was shot at around 7:30 pm local time - when it was still daylight - as he left a television studio after appearing on a talk show.
Het Parool daily newspaper quoted a resident as saying she heard five shots and went out to see what had happened.
She said she saw the journalist lying on the ground with a lot of blood on his face. She told the paper that he couldn't speak but was still alive, and that she held his hand as they waited for emergency services.
Prime Minister Rutte and Justice Minister Ferdinand Grapperhaus met at the Dutch National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism (NCTV) to discuss the shooting.
"This is a black day, not only for the people close to Peter R. de Vries, but also for the freedom of the press," Justice Minister Ferdinand Grapperhaus told journalists.
"In the Netherlands, we want journalists to be able to conduct any investigation which must be carried out in complete freedom. This freedom has been seriously infringed this evening."
The Committee to Protect Journalists called for authorities to "determine if he was targeted for his work, and ensure that the attacker and the masterminds of the attack face justice".
Messages of solidarity flooded Dutch social media, including from the royal family, who posted on their official Facebook page that they were deeply shocked and that Mr de Vries and his loved ones were in their thoughts.
In the past, Mr de Vries had been given police protection after receiving threats related to his involvement in high-profile criminal cases as a reporter and in court.

One such case was the 1983 abduction of beer magnate Freddy Heineken. His book on the case was later made into a film starring Anthony Hopkins.
In 2016, Mr De Vries filed a death threat complaint against one of the men involved in the kidnapping, notorious gangster Willem Holleeder.
He won an international Emmy for cracking the mystery of what happened to a US teen who disappeared from the Caribbean island of Aruba in 2005.
State broadcaster NOS reported that more recently, he had been acting as an advisor to Nabil B, a state witness testifying in a case against an alleged drug kingpin which opened in March.
Security around the case is extra-tight as in 2019, Nabil B's lawyer Derk Wiersum was gunned down in the street outside his house.