Nobody was injured in the incident near Amsterdam on Thursday night, but it forced NOS off air for around an hour and set the Netherlands on edge, coming just weeks after the deadly attack on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris that left 12 people dead.
When NOS came back on air, it showed recorded footage of the young man, wearing a black suit, white shirt and black tie, and carrying a pistol with what looked like a silencer attached.
Police said later the gun was a fake and that the man had no criminal record. Detectives were investigating his possible motives.
Speaking calmly to someone off-camera, apparently the security guard he had forced to let him into the building, the man said: "We are hired in by intelligence agencies."
Shortly after, police burst in with their guns drawn and ordered the man to drop his weapon and put his hands up.
Arrested without fight
At least five police officers then ordered him to turn around and lie down, which he did and he was arrested without a struggle and taken to a nearby police station for questioning.
Martijn Bink, a NOS reporter, said he spoke to the man after he was arrested and he claimed to be from a hackers' collective. He did not elaborate.
Police said in a statement the man demanded air time and threatened that bombs would go off at several locations around the Netherlands if his demand was not met.
Special police units evacuated the building and thoroughly searched it but allowed staff back in later in the evening after finding nothing suspicious.
Prosecutor Johan Bac, who spoke in Hilversum, said the man was from the small town of Pijnacker near The Hague.
Bac said he was being held on suspicion of making a threat, weapons possession and taking a hostage. The suspect's name was not released by the prosecutor.
Officials said they were still investigating the man's background and the seriousness of the threat he posed.
"There is a major investigation under way to get clarity as quickly as possible about what happened here tonight," Bac said.
Extra security
Jan de Jong, NOS director, told the broadcaster that the headquarters had extra security in the aftermath of the attack on Charlie Hebdo.
The media park in Hilversum, 20km east of Amsterdam, is home to NOS and many other Dutch broadcasters.
It has been tightly guarded for years, since Pim Fortuyn, a Dutch politician, was killed in a parking lot there in 2002 by an animal-rights activist.
"This is your worst nightmare, especially after Charlie Hebdo," De Jong said later on a special NOS news show.
De Jong said he would speak to staff on Friday and the already tight security would again be reviewed.
"We don't want to turn this into a bunker," he said.
[Aljazeera]
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