Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Italian police kill Berlin truck attack suspect in shoot-out

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MILAN: The suspect in the Berlin Christmas market truck attack was killed in a pre-dawn shoot-out with police in a suburb of this northern Italian city yesterday.

“The man killed was without a shadow of doubt Anis Amri,” Italy’s interior minister Marco Minniti said, referring to the 24- year- old Tunisian who is suspected of driving the truck that smashed through a Berlin market on Monday killing 12 people.

Minniti said Amri was stopped by two policemen about 3am in front of the Sesto San Giovanni train station, in the north of Milan.

When he was asked for his identifica­tion papers, Amri apparently pulled a gun and shot one of the two policemen, lightly wounding him in the shoulder. He was then shot dead by the police.

“These two extraordin­ary, extremely young men, simply by doing their duty, have done an extraordin­ary service to our community,” Minniti said.

One of the two policemen had only just started service and was in his trial period.

A judicial source said police had a tip off that Amri might be in the Milan area and additional patrols had been sent out to look for him.

A rail ticket found on Amri’s body indicated he had travelled by high-speed train from France to the northern Italian city of Turin, the source said. Amri then caught a train to the Milan suburbs.

Minniti said there could be “future developmen­ts”.

Islamic State has claimed responsibi­lity for the Berlin attack, in which a truck mowed through a crowd of people and bulldozed wooden huts where Christmas gifts and snacks were being sold.

Amri was caught on camera by German police on a regular stake-out at a mosque in Berlin’s Moabit district early on Tuesday, Germany’s rbb public broadcaste­r reported.

He had originally come to Europe in 2011, reaching the Italian island of Lampedusa by boat. He told authoritie­s he was a minor, though documents now indicate he was not, and he was transferre­d to Catania, Sicily, where he was enrolled in school.

Months later he was arrested after he attempted to set fire to the school, a senior police source said. He was later convicted of vandalism, threats and theft. He spent almost four years in two different prisons in Italy before being order out of the country.

The Berlin attack has put Europe on high alert over the Christmas period.

Yesterday morning, German special forces arrested two men suspected of planning an attack on a shopping mall in the city of Oberhausen. The men, brothers from Kosovo, aged 28 and 31, were arrested in the city of Duisburg.

A police spokesman said there was no connection between the Duisburg arrests and the Amri case.

Amri had been identified by security agencies as a potential threat and had had his applicatio­n for asylum rejected but authoritie­s had not managed to deport him because of missing identity documents. – Reuters

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