The Phnom Penh Post

German police look for motive after van attack leaves 3 dead

- Tom Barfield

GERMAN investigat­ors were puzzling on Sunday over the motives of a man who drove a van into a crowd at an open-air restaurant the day before, killing two people before shooting himself dead.

“So far there are no clues to a possible motive for the act,” said Martin Botzenhard­t, senior prosecutor in the western city of Muenster where the attack happened, in a statement.

“We are pressing hard on our investigat­ion into all possible avenues.”

Authoritie­s were near-certain that there was no Islamist connection to the violence in the historic centre of Muenster as had initially been feared. On Sunday they said they believed the driver had acted alone.

Media reports said the 48year-old German driver, identified only as Jens R, had a history of mental health problems.

The two victims killed were a 51-year-old woman and a 65year-old man, both from northern Germany.

As well as the dead, police said 20 were injured – some lifethreat­eningly – amid the broken and upturned tables and chairs seen strewn across the pavement. The Netherland­s Foreign Ministry said two of those hurt were Dutch, one of whom was in a critical condition.

In the van, police found the gun used by the driver to kill himself, a blank-firing pistol and some powerful fireworks.

A search of the man’s Muenster apartment late Saturday turned up more fireworks and a deactivate­d AK-47 assault rifle.

Police have appealed to the public for informatio­n, setting up a website where people can upload photos and videos.

‘No Islamist connection’

Armed police cordoned off a wide area around the scene of the attack, urging residents to avoid the city centre to allow investigat­ors to get to work amid initial fears the country had suffered another extremist assault.

“I was on my way home through the city here and saw firefighte­rs and ambulances everywhere. I thought something really terrible must have happened,” said Hubert Reckermann, a local man in his 60s.

“It’s still unbelievab­le for me, but these days anything can happen. You can’t really defend yourself against people with psychiatri­c problems.”

Germany has been on especially high alert for jihadist attacks after several claimed by Islamic State.

But in the Saturday afternoon attack, inflicted as locals and tourists enjoyed a sunny spring day, there was “no indication at the moment that there is any Islamist connection”, said North Rhine-Westphalia State Interior Minister Herbert Reul.

Far-right politician­s had sprung to denounce what they assumed was a jihadist attack, hoping to tap more political capital from Chancellor Angela Merkel’s 2015 decision to open Germany’s borders to more than 1 million mainly Muslim refugees and migrants.

While stressing the investigat­ion was still ongoing, Reul said that the perpetrato­r was “not, as has been claimed everywhere, a refugee or something like that”.

Public broadcaste­r ZDF reported the driver had recently attempted suicide while rolling news channel NTV said he had spoken of a desire to bring as much attention as possible to his death. ZDF also said that he had possible links with far-right movements.

Merkel said she was “deeply shaken” by the incident and pledged that “everything possible will be done to determine what was behind this act and to help the victims”.

 ?? DAVID YOUNG/DPA/AFP ?? A body bag on a stretcher is being loaded into a van as investigat­ors work at the square where a man rammed his car into a crowd killing two and injuring several others the night before in Muenster, western Germany, on Saturday.
DAVID YOUNG/DPA/AFP A body bag on a stretcher is being loaded into a van as investigat­ors work at the square where a man rammed his car into a crowd killing two and injuring several others the night before in Muenster, western Germany, on Saturday.

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