The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Syrian held after fatal knife attack in German town

- BY DANIEL NIEMANN AND DAVID MCHUGH

ASyrian man has been ordered held on suspicion of murder and membership of a terrorist organisati­on in connection with the Solingen knife attack that left three dead and eight wounded at a festival marking the German city’s 650th anniversar­y.

A judge at the Federal Court of Justice in Karlsruhe ordered 26-yearold Issa Al H held pending further investigat­ion and a possible indictment after federal prosecutor­s said he shared the radical ideology of the so-called Islamic State group – and was acting on those beliefs when he stabbed his victims repeatedly from behind in the head and upper body.

The ruling came after the suspect turned himself in, saying that he was responsibl­e for the attack, police said.

The suspect is also suspected of attempted murder and serious bodily injury, prosecutor­s said.

His last name was not released in line with German privacy rules.

The suspect, wearing handcuffs and leg shackles, was taken yesterday from the police station in Solingen for the initial court appearance.

He “shares the ideology of the foreign terrorist organisati­on Islamic State” and on the basis of his “radical Islamic conviction­s” decided “to kill the largest possible number of unbeliever­s” at the festival, the Office of the Federal Prosecutor said in a statement.

The suspect is a Syrian citizen who had applied for asylum in Germany, police confirmed to The Associated Press.

The dpa news agency reported, without citing a specific source, that his asylum claim had been denied and that he was to have been deported last year.

On Saturday, the IS group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, without providing evidence.

IS said on its news site that the attacker targeted Christians and that the perpetrato­r carried out the assaults on Friday night “to avenge Muslims in Palestine and everywhere”.

The attack comes amid debate over immigratio­n before regional elections on September 1 in Germany’s Saxony and Thuringia regions where anti-immigratio­n parties such as the populist Alternativ­e for Germany are expected to do well.

In June, Chancellor Olaf Scholz vowed the country would start deporting criminals from Afghanista­n and Syria again after a knife attack by an Afghan immigrant left one police officer dead and four other people injured.

Friday’s attack plunged the city of Solingen into shock and grief.

A city of about 160,000 residents near the bigger cities of Cologne and Duesseldor­f, Solingen was holding a Festival of Diversity to celebrate its anniversar­y.

People alerted police shortly after 9.30pm that a man had assaulted several people with a knife on the city’s central square, the Fronhof.

The three people killed were two men aged 56 and 67, and a 56-year-old woman, authoritie­s said. Police said that the attacker appeared to have deliberate­ly aimed for his victims’ throats.

The festival, which was due to have run until yesterday, was cancelled as police looked for clues in the cordoned-off square.

Instead, residents gathered to mourn the dead and injured, placing flowers and notes near the scene of the attack.

“Warum?” – meaning “why” – asked one sign placed amid candles and teddy bears.

 ?? ?? TRAGEDY: A man lights a candle at a memorial in front of Solingen City Church.
TRAGEDY: A man lights a candle at a memorial in front of Solingen City Church.

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