The National - News

Man wrongly arrested in Germany ‘fears for life’

Pakistani held for Berlin attacks says family under threat

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LONDON // The Pakistani wrongly arrested for the Berlin truck attack said yesterday that he had told German police he could not drive and was afraid for his family’s safety. Naveed Baloch, an asylum seeker from the province of Balochista­n, told the Guardian newspaper that he had left a friend’s house and was crossing a street when he saw a police car approachin­g fast and picked up his pace.

He said he was arrested and taken to a police station, where he was undressed and photograph­ed.

“When I resisted, they started slapping me,” said Mr Baloch, 24, who has been living in an undisclose­d location provided by police since his release because he said he was afraid for his life.

Mr Baloch, who sought refuge in Germany as a member of a secular separatist movement in Balochista­n, said he struggled to communicat­e because no translator could be found who could speak his native Balochi.

“I calmly told them I cannot drive at all. Neither can I even start a vehicle,” he said.

Mr Baloch was arrested on December 19 in the hours after the attack on a Christmas market in the heart of Berlin in which 12 people were killed.

Police released him 24 hours later, after failing to find evidence of his involvemen­t.

They instead identified rejected Tunisian asylum seeker Anis Amri as the prime suspect.

Amri was shot and killed by Italian police on December 23 after fleeing a manhunt in Germany.

Mr Baloch, a shepherd, said members of his family in the village of Mand in Balochista­n in south-west Pakistan had received threatenin­g phone calls after his arrest.

“Now they all know I fled to Germany, fearful of my life, and that I am claiming asylum here. It leaves my family very vulnerable and there’s nothing I can do to protect them,” he said.

Mr Baloch said he left Pakistan about a year ago, arriving in Germany via Iran, Turkey and Greece, because of death threats he had received for his activism for the Baloch national movement.

“Most of the people I worked with have been arrested and killed. I knew it was a matter of time before they came for me. That’s the reason I came to Germany,” he said.

Mineral-rich Balochista­n province has been plagued for decades by a separatist insurgency and sectarian killings.

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