• Tuesday, 24 December 2024

Suspect in custody after mass stabbing as German city mourns

Suspect in custody after mass stabbing as German city mourns

Solingen, 25 August 2024 (dpa/MIA) - German federal prosecutors have taken over the investigation into a knife attack in the western city of Solingen that left three people dead and others severely wounded, as they probe a possible Islamist motive.

Police said on Saturday night that a suspect had handed himself in and admitted responsibility for the attack.

A spokeswoman for the prosecutor's office told dpa on Sunday that it was investigating the suspect on suspicion of membership of the terrorist militia Islamic State.

Islamic State previously said that one of its members carried out the stabbings.

Police in Dusseldorf said on Sunday morning that the suspect is a 26-year-old Syrian. He was wearing blood-stained clothing when he handed himself in, dpa was told by a source in the police.

According to the Spiegel magazine, the suspect came to Germany at the end of December 2022 and applied for asylum.

Police check credibility of Islamic State claim

The security authorities were not previously aware of him as an Islamist extremist.

Islamic State claimed that the attack was "revenge for Muslims in Palestine and elsewhere," according to a statement on the group's mouthpiece Amak.

German police said they were still reviewing the claim of an Islamist link and had not yet determined if it was credible.

Investigators noted that Islamic State has previously made claims of involvement after other attacks without any reliable evidence of any real involvement.

The suspect was flown to Karlsruhe by helicopter before being brought barefoot by heavily armed officers to a police escort.

He is later expected to be brought before an investigating judge.

Germany's Federal Court of Justice (BGH) in Karlsruhe must decide whether the man will be remanded in custody on charges including membership of the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group and murder.

The attack took place on Friday evening at a market square in the city centre where a stage was set up for live music during the Festival of Diversity, which was being thrown to celebrate Solingen's 650th anniversary.

Those killed in the attack were two men, aged 67 and 56, and a 56-year-old woman.

Hopes raised for seriously injured

Eight people were wounded, four of them seriously, according to local police chief Thorsten Fleiss. The attacker apparently chose his victims at random but appeared to target their necks, Fleiss said.

"All four patients have a very good chance of making a full recovery," said Thomas Standl, medical director at the Solingen Municipal Hospital, to Welt TV.

One of the victims had to be ventilated for several hours, said Standl. He had stabilized quickly and was able to answer questions during the ward round on Sunday morning.

"The patient described to me quite impressively that he didn't actually feel any pain at all, but bent over after a woman who was bleeding from the neck - and then felt something like a dull thud on his back," said Standl.

This was apparently a deep knife thrust into a large vein in his chest, which critically injured him. At such moments, people release so much adrenalin that they may feel neither pain nor fear of death.

On Saturday, senior public prosecutor Markus Caspers said terrorism could not be ruled out as a motive but that authorities are still trying to piece together what happened.

A city in mourning

The crime scene in the city centre remained cordoned off on Sunday morning and several police cars were still on the scene.

Around 100 people are expected to join a memorial vigil for the victims at 5 pm (1500 GMT) on Sunday, according to an alliance of left-wing and civic organizations organizing the tribute.

The mayor of Solingen, Tim Kurzbach, said on Saturday evening that "the pain is infinitely large" in the city following the attack.

"We in Solingen are deeply affected, our city is full of grief. But not being alone in this grief is a good sign," said Kurzbach.

In addition to the emergency services, he also wanted to thank many people from all over Germany and from abroad for their expressions of sympathy. He said he received condolences from all over the world.

Hundreds of people gathered in a church within sight of the crime scene for a memorial service on Sunday morning.

The crowds were large - volunteers pushed additional chairs into the church at times. "At such times, we feel our helplessness and our powerlessness," said the pastor, Friederike Höroldt.

The service had been intended to help mark the 650th anniversary, but "now everything is different," Höroldt.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz called the attack a "terrible crime" and urged that the perpetrator be severely punished. He also pledged assistance to the city.