The National - News

Berlin attack suspect named

Family of Tunisian suspect questioned by German police

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TUNIS // Tunisian antiterror­ism police were yesterday questionin­g the family of Anis Amri, the prime suspect in the deadly attack on a Christmas market in Berlin.

German prosecutor­s yesterday named 24- year- old Tunisian national Mr Amri as their main suspect after finding asylum papers in the 40-tonne lorry used in the Berlin attack.

German authoritie­s are offering €100,000 (Dh384,000) as a reward for informatio­n leading to Mr Amri’s arrest. Police also warned he could be violent and armed. It was unclear whether Mr Amri’s brother and four sisters were also being questioned.

A security source said Mr Amri had been arrested several times in Tunisia for alleged drug use.

Mr Amri left Tunisia for Italy after the 2011 uprising.

His father said he served four years in jail in Italy on accusation­s of burning down a school.

He also said his son had left Italy for Germany a year ago. Mr Amri had been under investigat­ion for planning an act of violence against the state, said Ralf Jaeger, the interior minister of Germany’s North Rhine-Westphalia state.

Mr Amri’s request for asylum in Germany was rejected in June.

Mr Jaeger accused Tunisia of delaying Mr Amri’s extraditio­n from Germany for months, saying papers had only arrived yesterday.

“Tunisia disputed the fact that this person was one of its nationals,” he said.

Police are focusing their search for the Tunisian suspect in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

A previous suspect – a 23-yearold Pakistani asylum seeker – was released on Tuesday for lack of evidence, prompting fears of a killer on the loose and further rattling nerves in a shocked country.

The attack killed 12 people and was claimed by ISIL.

Twenty-four people remain in hospital, 14 of them in serious condition, said German interior minister Thomas de Maiziere. The ISIL-linked Amaq news agency said ISIL carried out the Berlin carnage in response to appeals to target citizens of coalition countries.

There was no evidence to back the claim.

Federal prosecutor­s said on Tuesday they had to release the only suspect in custody after finding no forensic evidence to link him to the attack. The Pakistani man was detained on Monday after reportedly being seen jumping out of the lorry and fleeing the scene. But officials had expressed growing doubts over whether they had the right suspect and he denied the charges under repeated questionin­g.

 ?? AP Photo ?? The wanted poster shows Anis Amri, 24. Authoritie­s are offering a reward of up to € 100,000 for the arrest of the Tunisian.
AP Photo The wanted poster shows Anis Amri, 24. Authoritie­s are offering a reward of up to € 100,000 for the arrest of the Tunisian.

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