Italy police kill Berlin attacker in shootout
Anis Amri drew gun at routine ID check, while video released yesterday shows the Tunisian pledging allegiance to ISIL
BERLIN, CAIRO // The main suspect in the Berlin Christmas market attack was shown pledging allegiance to ISIL in a video released yesterday.
The video, released by Amaq, a news agency linked to the extremist group, showed Anis Amri, who was killed when he opened fire on Italian police yesterday, pledging allegiance to ISIL chief Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi.
The two- minute, 42- second video showed Amri, a Tunisian, speaking directly to camera while outdoors wearing a winter coat and earphones. It was not clear where or when the video was filmed.
Amri also declared his desire to avenge Muslims killed in air strikes and called for attacks against “crusaders”. After four days on the run, he was shot dead by an Italian police officer in Milan after he pulled a gun on them when stopped during a routine identification check at about 3am near the city’s Sesto San Giovanni railway station.
ISIL had claimed responsibility for the Berlin attack and Amaq had earlier said the man shot dead by police in Italy had carried it out, calling him “a soldier” of the extremist group, whose actions were “in response to appeals to target citizens of coalition countries”.
Germany is part of the US-led coalition fighting ISIL forces in Iraq and Syria.
German authorities are now investigating whether Amri, who turned 24 on Thursday, acted alone in the attack or whether he had accomplices. Federal prosecutor Peter Frank said there were still many unanswered questions, not least whether the gun Amri had in Milan was the one he used to shoot the Polish driver of the lorry that ploughed into the crowds in Berlin last Monday.
“It is very important for us to determine whether there was a network of accomplices ... in the preparation or the execution of the attack, or the flight of the suspect,” Mr Frank said. German interior minister Thomas de Maiziere later thanked Italian police for their swift action, saying the officers had been “especially brave” and done “excellent work”.
He said a team of German federal police was on the way to Italy to assist in the case which demonstrated “the enormous importance of European and transatlantic cooperation in the fight against terror”. But, he warned: “Although this manhunt was successful, the threat of terrorism is unchanged for Germany. It remains high, the security authorities remain vigilant.”
The federal police chief, Holger Muench, said that “hundreds of investigators” would be working on the case “despite the Christmas holidays” beginning today.
Amri became prime suspect after police found documents and fingerprints in the lorry and it emerged that he had been in trouble with the law before and had been refused asylum in Germany.
In Rome, Italy’s interior minister Marco Minniti said fingerprints supplied by Germany had established Amri’s identity “without a shadow of a doubt”.
The German authorities issued wanted posters of Amri, describing him as “armed and violent” and offering a €100,000 (Dh384,000) reward for information leading to his arrest.
The Tunisian arrived in Milan from France via Turin, according to a train ticket police found on his body.
French officials refused to comment on his passage through France, which has increased surveillance on its trains after recent French attacks and the Berlin massacre. When he was stopped and asked to show his papers, he pulled a pistol from his backpack and fired on officer Christian Movio, 36, wounding him in the shoulder. The other officer, who is a trainee, shot Amri dead.
Yesterday, there was praise for Luca Scata, the 29-year-old Sicilian cadet who fired off two rounds after Amri opened fire on his partner.
Witnesses said the two policemen had then crouched over Amri to try to keep him alive, but the Tunisian died after 10 minutes.
Mr Scata has been in the police for nine months and was three months into a probationary period in Milan.
Mr Movio is in hospital but his condition is not life threatening.
“My partner’s actions were exemplary, he reacted immediately when the pistol came out,” he said.
Italian prime minister Paolo Gentiloni praised the two officers for their courage, but also called for greater cross-border police cooperation, suggesting some dismay that Europe’s open border policy had enabled Amri to move around so easily.
The district of Milan where the shoot- out took place was once home to industrial plants but residents said it had fallen into decay.
“This area used to be full of Milan’s biggest industrial plants, but there’s an influx of many illegal immigrants, so we are worried,” said Giovanni Di Gioia, 51, who is unemployed.
This week Italian authorities increased security measures in Rome, the nation’s capital, and Milan, its business centre, after the Berlin attack.
City officials installed concrete barricades around Milan’s landmark cathedral, and soldiers patrol the nearby Christmas market.