Deadly
Magdeburg Christmas market attack shakes Germany as election looms
With voters
going to the polls in February, the tragedy ramps up concerns about security.
December 20,
2024 9:22 pm CET
By Giselle
Ruhiyyih Ewing and Jürgen Klöckner
https://www.politico.eu/article/magdeburg-germany-christmas-market-car-crash/
A driver
plowed a car at high speed into crowds of people at a Christmas market in the
eastern German city of Magdeburg, adding further tension to an election
campaign already riven by a bitter debate over migration.
Right-wing
parties seized on reports that the driver was a man from Saudi Arabia, even
before that or any motive for the apparent attack was confirmed. The incident
took place almost eight years to the day after a terrorist drove a truck into a
Christmas market in Berlin.
At least two
people were killed on Friday night, including a young child, according to the
prime minister of Saxony-Anhalt, Reiner Haseloff, of the center-right Christian
Democratic Union (CDU). News agency AFP reported that “60 to 80” people were
injured, citing the local rescue service.
Authorities
believe the driver acted alone, Haseloff said, adding that the man came to
Germany in 2006 and worked as a doctor.
Germany’s
election, triggered by the collapse of a three-party coalition led by
Chancellor Olaf Scholz, is scheduled for Feb. 23. The opposition CDU are
currently leading in opinion polls, followed by the anti-immigrant, far-right
Alternative for Germany (AfD), which asked, “when will this madness end?”
Migration
has become a huge issue in Germany, which took in large numbers of refugees
from Syria under former Chancellor Angela Merkel in 2015. With external
commentators from Elon Musk, an adviser to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump,
to Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, already commenting on Friday night’s
tragedy, it has the potential to steer the debate even further in that
direction.
The likely
next German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, has outlined a conservative vision for
how he’ll govern, saying he’ll sharply reduce the number of asylum-seekers
being allowed to settle in the country.
Current
Chancellor Olaf Scholz addressed the incident shortly after it happened, saying
his thoughts were “with the victims and their families.” He said he stood by
the people of Magdeburg and thanked rescue workers “in these anxious hours.”
According to
WELT, POLITICO’s sister publication in the Axel Springer group, the driver had
rented a car that he drove to the market that was thronged with revelers.
Authorities
have not ruled out that a piece of luggage found on the passenger seat could
contain an explosive device, WELT also reported.
Magdeburg
police shut the market, citing “extensive police operations” in the area, as
images showed dozens of emergency personnel working at the site.
AfD Chair
Alice Weidel expressed her condolences, adding pointedly, “When will this
madness end?” Her party was endorsed by billionaire tech entrepreneur Musk
earlier Friday.
“My thoughts
today are with the victims of the brutal and cowardly act in Magdeburg,”
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a post on X. “My
condolences go out to the family and friends, my thanks to the police and
rescue workers. This act of violence must be investigated and severely
punished.”
Merz called
the news “depressing,” adding: “My thoughts are with the victims and their
families. I thank all the emergency services who are caring for the injured on
site.”
In recent
polls by the institute Forschergruppe Wahlen on the main concerns of German
voters, the economic crisis overtook migration, which more than a third of
respondents said was the most important issue at the moment.
This could
swing back after the attack, as it did following a killing at a festival in
Solingen, western Germany this summer. Nevertheless, the leading parties have
already adopted a tougher stance on migration in their election manifestos. The
conservative CDU, like the AfD, wants to introduce border controls for Germany
and make it easier to deport refugees.
German Vice
Chancellor Robert Habeck described the “terrible news” in a place “where people
wanted to spend the Advent season in peace and community. My thoughts are with
the victims and their families. I thank all the emergency services on site who
are doing everything they can to help and to clarify the background.”
Interior
Minister Nancy Faeser and Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock both expressed
their shock at the incident, and sent condolences to the victims and their
families.
“The
emergency services are doing everything they can to care for the injured and
save lives,” Faeser added.
Thursday
marked the eighth anniversary of the attack on Berlin’s Breitscheidplatz
Christmas market when Islamist Anis Amri killed 12 people with a truck. Another
victim later died from his injuries.
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