‘Religious
Motivation’ Possible in Berlin Stabbing, Police Say
The suspect,
a Syrian refugee, told the police that a plan had come into his mind to kill
Jews. The attack raises tensions just before an election in which immigration
is a big issue.
By Eve Sampson
Feb. 22, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/22/world/europe/berlin-stabbing-holocaust-memorial.html
The man detained in connection with the stabbing of a
Spanish tourist at Berlin’s Holocaust memorial on Friday may have been planning
for weeks to kill Jewish people, according to German authorities.
The suspect, a 19-year-old Syrian refugee, was carrying a
copy of the Quran, a prayer rug and a piece of paper with the attack’s date and
Quran verses when he was apprehended, suggesting a “religious motivation,” the
Berlin police said on Saturday. In a joint statement with the public
prosecutor’s office, they added that things the suspect had said to the police
suggested that over several weeks “a plan to kill Jews came together in his
mind,” and that the location of the attack also reflected this idea.
The police said they had not ruled out connections to the
Middle East conflict but had found no evidence linking the suspect to other
groups or individuals. He came to Germany in 2023 as an underage refugee, was a
legal resident and had no criminal record, the authorities said, adding that
were also investigating if mental illness had played a role in the attack.
The 30-year-old victim, whose name was not made public,
sustained neck injuries that required him to have emergency surgery and be
placed in a medically induced coma, officials said, but his life was no longer
at risk.
The attack took place at Berlin’s Memorial to the Murdered
Jews of Europe, an expansive memorial across the street from the U.S. Embassy.
It came as Germans prepared to vote in a divisive national election on Sunday,
and amid a rise in antisemitism across Europe.
Germany’s economic problems, coupled with frustration over
immigration, are central issues to voters in a parliamentary election where the
far-right party, Alternative for Germany, or AfD, has risen in the polls.
The AfD party, which has been linked to neo-Nazis, has
promised to crack down on immigration and deport some immigrants, a message
that has gained traction in a country that has suffered a series of attacks
perpetrated by people from Afghanistan and the Middle East.
An asylum seeker from Afghanistan rammed his car into a
union demonstration in Munich on Feb. 13, injuring dozens, and in December, a
Saudi citizen killed six people and injured hundreds more when he drove his car
through a Christmas market in central Germany.
Eve Sampson is a reporter covering international news and a
member of the 2024-25 Times Fellowship class, a program for journalists early
in their careers. More about Eve Sampson
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