SOLINGEN, Germany: German police said on Sunday that a Syrian man has given himself up and confessed to killing three people and wounding eight others in a knife rampage at a street festival.
The random attack as thousands of people gathered on Friday night in the western city of Solingen has stunned Germany.
In a statement, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) affirmed that the UAE expresses its strong condemnation of these criminal acts and its permanent rejection of all forms of violence and terrorism aimed at undermining security and stability in contravention of international law.
The Ministry expressed its sincere condolences and sympathy to the government and people of Germany, and to the families of the victims of this heinous crime, as well as its wishes for a speedy recovery for all the injured. -- WAM
Two men aged 56 and 67 and a 56-year-old woman were killed, officials said. Four of the wounded remained in a serious condition. All of the victims were stabbed in the neck, according to police.
Police said in a statement that the suspect was a 26-year-old Syrian who had “given himself up to authorities... and declared himself responsible for the attack”.
Officers arrested a suspect in a raid at a hostel for asylum seekers on Saturday, not far from the scene of the attack, a police spokesman told AFP.
Police have evidence linking the man to the knife attacks, according to North Rhine-Westphalia state interior minister Herbert Reul. Federal prosecutors have launched an investigation into charges of “participating in a terrorist organisation”, a spokesman said.
According to the Bild and Spiegel newspapers, the suspect arrived in Germany in December 2022 and had a protected immigration status often given to those fleeing war-torn Syria.
He was not known to the security services as an extremist, the newspapers reported.
Teen arrested
Police have also arrested a 15-year-old suspected of failing to report a criminal act. Witnesses allegedly saw the teen discussing the attack, said Markus Caspers, prosecutor of Duesseldorf, just west of Solingen.
The attack took place as thousands of people gathered for the first night of a “Festival of Diversity”, part of a series of events to mark Solingen’s 650th anniversary. The whole festival has now been cancelled.
Germany has been on high alert for extremist attacks since the Gaza war erupted on October 7 with the Hamas attacks on Israel.
German street festivals and markets have previously been hit.
A truck rampage at a Berlin Christmas market in 2016 killed 12 people. In May, a police officer was killed and five people were wounded in a knife attack at a far-right rally in Mannheim, with an Islamist motive suspected.
The militant Daesh (Islamic State) group’s Amaq propaganda arm said “the perpetrator of the attack on a gathering of Christians” in Solingen “was a soldier of the Islamic State”.
Daesh said the attack was carried out as “revenge for Muslims in Palestine and everywhere”, in an apparent reference to the Gaza conflict.
The claim could not be immediately verified, though German officials had said “a terrorist motive cannot be excluded”.
Interior Minister Nancy Faeser had warned this month that Germany was in “the firing line” of Islamist groups.
National and local leaders, including Chancellor Olaf Scholz, said the country had been “deeply shocked” by the deaths in Solingen, a city of 160,000 people.
Witness Lars Breitzke told the Solinger Tageblatt newspaper he was near the attack, close to the main stage, and “understood from the expression on the singer’s face that something was wrong”.
“And then, a metre away from me, a person fell,” said Breitzke, who at first thought it was someone who had had too much to drink.
When he turned around, he saw other people on the ground in pools of blood.
During a visit to the site of the tragedy Faeser called for the country to “remain united” as she denounced “those who want to stir up hatred”.
“Let us not be divided,” she said.
Scholz’s centre-left coalition faces regional elections next week in the east of the country, where the far-right AfD is leading in polls.
Germany took in more than a million asylum seekers in 2015-2016 at the height of Europe’s migrant crisis.
The influx was deeply divisive in Germany and fuelled the popularity of the AfD.