Deccan Chronicle

Hunt for Berlin suspect intensifie­s

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Berlin, Dec. 22: German authoritie­s were under fire on Thursday after it emerged that the prime suspect in Berlin’s deadly truck attack, a rejected Tunisian asylum seeker, was known as a potentiall­y dangerous jihadist.

German prosecutor­s have issued a Europewide wanted notice for 24year-old Anis Amri, offering a 1,00,000-euro ($104,000) reward for informatio­n leading to his arrest and warning he “could be violent and armed”.

Asylum office papers believed to belong to Amri, alleged to have links to the radical Islamist scene, were found in the cab of the 40tonne lorry that rammed through a crowded Christmas market in Berlin on Monday, killing 11.

The twelfth victim, the hijacked truck’s Polish driver, was found shot in the cab.

Police on Thursday searched a refugee centre in Emmerich, western Germany, where Amri stayed a few months ago, as well as two apartments in Berlin, the media reported.

But as the Europe-wide manhunt intensifie­d, questions were also raised about how the suspect had been able to avoid arrest and deportatio­n despite being on the radar of several security agencies.

“The authoritie­s had him in their crosshairs and he still managed to vanish,” said Der Spiegel weekly on its website.

The Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung criticised police for wasting time focusing on a Pakistani suspect immediatel­y after the truck assault, in what turned out to be a false lead.

“It took a while before the federal police turned to Amri as a suspect,” it said. The attack, Germany’s deadliest in recent years, has been claimed by the Islamic State group. Twenty-four people remain in hospital, 14 of whom were seriously injured. — PTI

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel at Berlin offices of the Federal Criminal Police for investigat­ion of the attack.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel at Berlin offices of the Federal Criminal Police for investigat­ion of the attack.

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