Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen was assaulted by a man in central Copenhagen on Friday but walked away, according to media reports. Frederiksen had no outward signs of harm, a local resident told Reuters. "Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen was beaten on Friday evening at Kultorvet Square in Copenhagen by a man who was subsequently arrested. The Prime Minister is shocked by the incident," her office said in a statement. FORMER BREXIT LEADER NIGEL FARAGE IS RUNNING IN UK ELECTION, WANTS TO ‘MAKE BRITAIN GREAT AGAIN’ Police said on social media platform X they had arrested a man and were investigating the incident but declined to give further details. "She seemed a little stressed," Soren Kjergaard, who works as a barista on the square, told Reuters. Danish Minister of Environment Magnus Heunicke said he was shocked by news of the attack. GERMAN RIGHT WING CANDIDATE STABBED IN LATEST ATTACK AHEAD OF ELECTIONS "Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen was today assaulted and beaten by a man on Kultorvet in Copenhagen. Mette is naturally shocked by the attack. I must say that it shakes all of us who are close to her," he wrote on X. Edgars Rinkevics, president of Latvia, said news of the attack was "disturbing." "Violence is completely unacceptable in a democratic society," he wrote on X. "My thoughts are with @Statsmin and her family." The assault came two days before Danes head to the polls in the European Union election. Three weeks ago, Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico was seriously injured in an assassination attempt, Reuters reported.