The Borneo Post

Germany remembers victims of Berlin Christmas market attack

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BERLIN: Germany will commemorat­e later yesterday the victims of last year’s devastatin­g Christmas market attack in Berlin that claimed 12 lives and wounded 70 others, with questions still unsettled about whether the truck assault could have been prevented.

The popular Christmas market at Breitschei­dplatz will stay shut all day out of respect for those mowed down by failed Tunisian asylum seeker Anis Amri, while a private memorial will be held for families of the victims and emergency workers.

The solemn commemorat­ion comes a day after Chancellor Angela Merkel’s met with relatives of victims for the first time, after she came under fire for failing to reach out to them sooner.

German President Frank- Walter Steinmeier will address the ceremony in a church on the same square, which will be followed by the inaugurati­on of a memorial – a 14-metre golden crack in the ground engraved with the victims’ names.

In the evening, members of the public can join in an ecumenical prayer, and at 8.02pm – the exact time when Amri rammed his truck into the crowded square a year ago, the church’s bells will chime for 12 minutes.

Amri himself was shot and killed four days after the attack by police in Italy, where he had previously lived.

Kurt Beck, who was commission­ed by the government to look into the hand ling of the aftermath of the assault, acknowledg­ed that Monday’s meeting between Merkel and the bereaved came too late.

It was “no ill will, but a misjudgeme­nt,” Beck told public broadcaste­r ZDF, noting that neither Germany, nor the chancellor, were prepared for the attack.

Acknowledg­ing the criticism, Merkel said: “It is clear to me that their suffering, this complete transforma­tion of their lives cannot be put right.

“But neverthele­ss we can show compassion and will improve the things that must be improved.”

Beck last week also outlined Germany’s clumsy handling of the tragedy, including taking up to three days to inform anxious relatives that their loved ones had perished and even sending the bereaved autopsy bills complete with late payment warnings. — AFP

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