National Post (National Edition)

Vienna gunman acted alone

Police criticized for failure to monitor jihadist

- FRANCOIS MURPHY

VIENNA • Large quantities of cellphone footage have confirmed that the jihadist who killed four people in a rampage in Vienna on Monday was the only gunman, but Austria fumbled intelligen­ce on him, Interior Minister Karl Nehammer said on Wednesday.

Austria arrested 14 people aged 18 to 28 on Tuesday in connection with the attack and is investigat­ing them on suspicion of belonging to a terrorist organizati­on, he said. But it would also have to investigat­e its own actions, he added.

“Before the terror attack began, according to the informatio­n currently available, some things also went wrong,” Nehammer told a news conference.

In July, neighbouri­ng Slovakia's intelligen­ce service had handed over informatio­n suggesting the attacker had tried and failed to buy ammunition there, Nehammer and a top ministry official, Director General for Public Security Franz Ruf, said.

“In the next steps evidently something went wrong here with communicat­ions,” said Nehammer, who called for the formation of an independen­t commission to examine the errors made.

After receiving the tip-off from Slovakia, Austria's domestic intelligen­ce agencies at the federal and provincial level made the necessary checks and sent questions back to Bratislava, Ruf said.

“It's up to the commission to clarify whether the process went optimally and in line with the law,” he said when pressed on what had gone wrong.

The gunman, who was shot dead by police within minutes of opening fire on crowded bars on Monday evening, was a 20-year-old with dual Austrian and North Macedonian citizenshi­p. Born and raised in Vienna, he had already been convicted of trying to reach Syria to join Islamic State and had spent time in jail.

All of those arrested in Austria have a “migration background,” Nehammer said. Vienna police Chief Gerhard Puerstl added that some were dual citizens of Bangladesh, North Macedonia, Turkey or Russia.

Neutral Austria, part of the U.S.-led Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS formed in 2014, has for years seen jihadist attacks as its biggest security threat and warned of the danger posed by foreign fighters returning from Iraq or Syria or their admirers.

At the end of 2018, the authoritie­s knew of 320 people from Austria who were actively involved or had wanted to participat­e in jihad in Syria and Iraq. Of these, around 58 people were thought to have died in the region and 93 to have returned to Austria. Another 62 were prevented from leaving the country.

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