Afghan arrested after car ramming 'attack' injures 28 in Germany
![Afghan arrested after car ramming 'attack' injures 28 in Germany Afghan arrested after car ramming 'attack' injures 28 in Germany](https://citizentv.obs.af-south-1.myhuaweicloud.com/144899/conversions/munich-og_image.webp)
The carnage came on the eve of a high-profile security conference in Munich © Michaela STACHE / AFP
Police arrested an Afghan asylum seeker at the scene of what
German leaders labelled a car ramming "attack" that injured 28
people, some seriously, in the southern city of Munich Thursday.
The carnage came on the eve of a high-profile security
conference in the Bavarian city and amid a heated immigration debate ahead of the February 23 elections following a spate of similar attacks.
The vehicle, a Mini Cooper, barrelled into a demonstration
held by trade unionists, leaving a trail of injured and their belongings
scattered on the street, including a baby stroller.
Police who rushed to the scene fired a shot at the battered
car and detained the driver, a 24-year-old Afghan asylum seeker who was named
by German media as Farhad N.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz condemned the "awful"
attack and promised severe consequences.
"From my point of view it is quite clear: this attacker
cannot count on any mercy, he must be punished and he must leave the
country," Scholz told reporters.
Shoes, glasses and the infant stroller were left littered in
the wake of the suspected attack, which follows a deadly car rampage at a
Christmas market in the eastern city of Magdeburg in December.
Alexa Graef, a witness, said she was
"shocked" after seeing the car drive into the crowd, "which
looked deliberate".
"I hope it's the last time I see anything like
that," said Graef, whose office overlooked the junction where the incident
happened.
Police inspected the cream-coloured Mini Cooper, leading
sniffer dogs around the vehicle.
The 24-year-old Afghan asylum seeker, who lived in Munich,
was arrested at the scene after law enforcement fired on the car once, but
without hitting him, police said.
The authorities have "indications of an extremist
motive" and the investigation has been handed over to the regional
prosecutor's office, they added.
Earlier Thursday, a fire service spokesman told AFP that
several of those hurt had been "seriously injured, some of them in a
life-threatening condition".
The suspect was said to have arrived in Germany in 2016 at
the height of the mass migrant influx to Europe.
His asylum request was reportedly rejected by German
authorities, but he was not slated for deportation.
Bavaria state premier Markus Soeder told journalists that
the incident was "just terrible" and that "it looks like this
was an attack".
"This is not the first incident... we must show
determination that something will change in Germany," said Soeder, whose
CSU party is allied with the conservative CDU at the national level.
"This is further proof that we can't keep going from
attack to attack," Soeder said.
The CDU/CSU alliance, which polls suggest is on track to
emerge as the winner of the election in just over a week, has called for
tougher curbs on immigration after recent attacks.
Under pressure on the issue even before the election was
called, Scholz's government had moved to make asylum rules stricter and speed
up deportations, including to Afghanistan.
Scholz said Thursday the returns were
"complicated" to organise but that the government was "in the
process of doing so in other cases... not just once, but on an ongoing
basis."
This latest incident comes amid an already heated debate on
immigration and security after several similar incidents, most recently in the
Bavarian city of Aschaffenburg last month.
Two people were killed in a knife attack on kindergarten
toddlers there, including a two-year-old boy.
After that attack police arrested a 28-year-old Afghan man
who authorities say had a history of mental illness.
In December, six people were killed after a car ploughed
into a Christmas market in the eastern city of Magdeburg, also wounding
hundreds.
A Saudi man was arrested after that attack, with Interior
Minister Nancy Faeser saying he also appeared to be mentally disturbed.
The president of the Verdi union behind Thursday's
demonstration, Frank Werneke, said in a statement: "We are deeply upset
and shocked at the awful incident."
The attack came as US Vice President JD Vance was expected
in the city ahead of the annual Munich Security Conference, which starts
Friday.
Also arriving in Munich will be Ukraine's President
Volodymyr Zelensky, who is set to hold crucial talks with US representatives
over a possible end to the war with Russia.
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