Views: 2230
|
Replies:0
|
Berlin attack: Police hunt Tunisian suspect after finding ID papers
By CNN
Tag:
ISIS
Berlin attack
|
OP
12/22/2016
Authorities say they're looking for Anis Amri in connection with Monday's market attack in Berlin. Police have offered a reward of up to 100,000 euros (about $104,000) for information about his whereabouts, and said Amri is "under urgent suspicion." "If you see this person that we are seeking, inform the police. Please do not put yourself in danger because this person could be violent and armed!" the notice said. Latest developments • Amri is 1.78 meters (5 feet 10 inches) tall and weighs about 75 kilograms (165 pounds). • The suspect was arrested in August with forged documents en route to Italy, but a judge released him, an official says. • Police at one point noticed the suspect because he was looking for a gun. • The suspect arrived in Germany in 2015 and was known to be in touch with radical Islamist groups, a state minister says. • The suspect's asylum request was refused this year and deportation was attempted, state minister says. • German police conduct raids in North Rhine-Westphalia region, a security official says. This is one of at least three photos of Anis Amri that Germany authorities released. Hunt for suspect Amri's identity papers were found inside the cabin of the truck used in Monday's attack, German security officials said. People leave tributes to the Berlin victims. One note reads, "Let your love grow." Before Amri was publicly named, Ralf Jaeger, interior minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, told reporters the suspect was known to German security services as someone in contact with radical Islamist groups, and had been assessed as posing a risk. One German security official told CNN the suspect had been arrested in August with forged documents in the southern German town of Friedrichshafen, on his way to Italy, but a judge released him. The suspect also came onto the radar of German police because he was looking for a gun, the official said. Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière told reporters a manhunt had been underway across Europe since midnight. Another photo of Amri, released by German authorities. German police carried out raids Wednesday in connection with the investigation in North Rhine-Westphalia, where Amri had stayed, another security official told CNN. ISIS claimed it had inspired Monday's attack. The terror group's affiliated Amaq News Agency described the perpetrator as a "soldier of the Islamic State" who had acted in response to calls for attacks in the West. Amri was named as a suspect a day after police released a different man. The first man, an asylum seeker believed to be from Pakistan, had been detained in the immediate aftermath of the attack, with German media reporting that witnesses had said he'd driven the truck. But Peter Frank, general prosecutor at Germany's Federal Court of Justice, said that forensic tests offered no link between the man and the truck's cabin. Link to pro-ISIS network? Jaeger said Amri was believed to have entered Germany in July 2015 and had traveled between Berlin, North Rhine-Westphalia and other cities. He was "very mobile," but was mostly in Berlin since February, he said. Amri requested asylum in Germany, but this was refused in June, Jaeger said -- two months before his reported arrest in southern Germany. A deportation process was started in North Rhine-Westphalia, Jaeger said. The suspect had been registered by German authorities as someone who posed a risk, said Stephan Mayer, a spokesman for the Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union parliamentary group. Mayer said the suspect was believed to have links to a Salafist group, referring to an ultra-conservative branch of Islam. But authorities' attempts to deport him were thwarted because they were unable to establish his identity beyond doubt, Mayer said. Amri requested asylum in Germany, but this was refused in June, Jaeger said -- two months before his reported arrest in southern Germany. A deportation process was started in North Rhine-Westphalia, Jaeger said. The suspect had been registered by German authorities as someone who posed a risk, said Stephan Mayer, a spokesman for the Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union parliamentary group. Mayer said the suspect was believed to have links to a Salafist group, referring to an ultra-conservative branch of Islam. But authorities' attempts to deport him were thwarted because they were unable to establish his identity beyond doubt, Mayer said. Original truck driver slain A Polish man found shot dead inside the truck has been identified as its original driver, according to German media. He was not driving during the incident, police said. The gun used to kill him has not been recovered. The slain driver may have been involved in a struggle with the suspect inside the truck's cabin before he was shot, CNN terrorism analyst Paul Cruickshank said. This could be when the suspect's identity papers were dropped, he suggested. The truck, which was owned by a Polish company, was hauling 25 tons of steel before it was steered into the crowd, according to its owner, Ariel Zurawski. He identified the slain driver as his cousin. Police have appealed to the public for any digital videos and photos they have of the attack or possible suspects. 'Like a little war zone' German authorities have not publicly named any of the victims, and police have asked people not to post videos or photos of them as a sign of respect. But Italy's Foreign Ministry said Wednesday that Italian national Fabrizia Di Lorenzo was missing following the attack and that her family was now in Berlin. The ministry said it was waiting for German investigators to complete their work before issuing a statement. Italy's ANSA news agency reported the missing woman, 31, worked in Berlin and that her cell phone was found at the attack scene. People gather Wednesday in Berlin to sing and pay tribute to victims of the attack. Michael Schuetz, the doctor who oversaw the emergency response at Berlin's Charité hospital, told CNN that survivors described a scene "like a little war zone." Physical injuries ranged from major trauma for those hit by the truck to lesser injuries suffered when poles from the market huts fell on people, he said. Dueling protests Berliners who came to leave flowers and candles at makeshift shrines near the Christmas market told CNN Wednesday they would not allow the attack to change the way they led their lives. One handwritten note left with a bunch of roses read, "You will not have our hate," echoing the words of writer Antoine Leiris after he lost his wife in the Paris attacks. Wednesday night, the issue of migrants drew dueling protests outside the Berlin Zoo rail station. On one side a few dozen people joined a demonstration by the far-right, ultranationalist National Democratic Party, waving German flags and railing against the acceptance of migrants and refugees. A few dozen people protested in Berlin on Wednesday against the acceptance of migrants and refugees. They were countered by a group of several hundred people, many of whom shouted: "Say it loud, say it clear, refugees are welcome here!" Some in the counterdemonstration carried white signs with red hearts printed on them. Signs carried messages such as "Solidarity instead of hate," and "Together against Nazis." A pro-refugee crowd showed up outside Berlin Zoo rail station on Wednesday to counter a smaller, anti-refugee protest nearby. As the NPD side delivered speeches on a loudspeaker, the counterdemonstrators drowned them out with music, chants and whistles. Among the pro-refugee crowd was 70-year-old Irmela Schramm, who for years has sought out neo-Nazi graffiti across Germany and painted over it with heart shapes. "When I saw what happened on Monday, I knew I would have a lot more to do," she said Wednesday. Irmela Schramm, 70, was demonstrating on the pro-refugee side. She has traveled around Germany for years, painting over neo-Nazi graffiti with heart shapes. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has come under political pressure over her government's generous acceptance of refugees. Germany has taken in more than 890,000 asylum-seekers in the past year, a much higher number than other European nations. The issue contributed to defeats for Merkel's Christian Democratic Union in Berlin and her home state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern during regional elections this year.
0
0
|
|