Two dead
after car driven into crowds in German city of Mannheim
Several
people injured and driver of SUV arrested by police, who had warned of
terrorist threats at carnivals
Kate
Connolly in Berlin
Mon 3 Mar
2025 16.56 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/mar/03/mannheim-germany-car-driven-into-crowd
A car has
rammed into crowds in the centre of the German city of Mannheim, killing two
people and injuring several others, casting a shadow over regional carnival
festivities.
Police said
they had arrested a man, the driver of a black Ford Fiesta, who was reportedly
being treated for his injuries in hospital under tight police protection.
Thomas Strobl, the interior minister of Baden-Württemberg state, said the
suspect was a 40-year-old German man from the south-western state of
Rhineland-Palatinate who was believed to have acted alone.
Investigators
later said there were “concrete indications” that the man had mental health
problems, and ruled out a “politically motivated act”.
“Two people
died from their injuries and several others are seriously injured,” Strobl said
in a statement late on Monday. The victims were identified as an 83-year-old
woman and a 54-year-old man.
Witnesses
described people lying on the ground at the scene near the central
pedestrianised Paradeplatz after the car ploughed into the crowd, heading in
the direction of a water tower. Attempts were being made to resuscitate at
least two people at the scene.
German
police and prosecutors said the driver intentionally rammed his car into the
crowds celebrating carnival before the fasting season of Lent. He was being
investigated for murder and attempted murder.
They said
the driver shot himself in the mouth when he was arrested and received medical
treatment at a hospital. He could not yet be questioned.
The incident
follows a string of violent attacks including two other car rammings, in Munich
last month and in Magdeburg in December. Mannheim was the scene of a stabbing
in May 2024 in which a police officer was killed and five people wounded.
All those
attacks were carried out by migrants, fuelling a heated debate over the
country’s immigration policy before Germany’s general election last month. The
vote was won by the conservative CDU/CSU alliance, which campaigned on promises
to tighten border controls, while the far-right, anti-immigrant Alternative für
Deutschland came second with its best ever result.
The suspect
in Monday’s attack was understood to be a German citizen.
Germany’s
carnival season culminates in Rosenmontag (Rose Monday), with crowds in fancy
dress and parades of floats that typically feature comical and satirical
displays of events dominating current affairs. Mannheim held its main parade on
Sunday.
Security
forces had alerted carnival organisers and the public more than a week ago
about warnings published on social media accounts connected to the militant
group Islamic State, calling for followers to carry out attacks in the carnival
strongholds of the Rhineland, to which Mannheim belongs, and areas in the south
– both Catholic regions.
Germany’s
interior minister, Nancy Faeser, who had been due to attend a popular parade in
Cologne on Monday, cancelled her attendance to travel to Mannheim instead, a
spokesperson said.
Friedrich
Merz, who is likely to be Germany’s next chancellor, wrote on X that “the
incident – as well as the terrible acts of the past few months – is an urgent
reminder that we must do everything we can to prevent such acts”. The outgoing
chancellor, Olaf Scholz, referred to the stabbing attack of last year, writing
on X: “Once again we mourn with Mannheim. Once again we mourn with the families
of the victims of a senseless act of violence.”
Kasim Timur,
57, who runs a cafe on Paradeplatz, told Der Spiegel: “It breaks one’s heart.”
He said one of his colleagues had reported seeing some of the seriously
injured, including children. Another colleague, on her way to work at the cafe,
had seen a dark-coloured Ford car racing towards Paradeplatz, he said.
“Initially
she thought it was someone who had caused an accident and fled the scene,” he
said. “Only later did she understand what had happened.” Timur said the city
had not yet got over the stabbing attack of less than a year ago. “Now the
horror is back,” he told Spiegel. “That is very scary.”
According to
media reports, three people were receiving emergency treatment at University
Hospital Mannheim, including two adults and a child. Eight medical trauma teams
were on standby ready to attend adults and children, according to the hospital.
Police urged
people not to post videos from the attack, or to spread information that had
not been officially confirmed, warning of numerous “false reports” related to
the attack that were circulating on social media.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário