Police in Germany have arrested an Afghan migrant after a car drove into a union demonstration in central Munich on Thursday, injuring at least 30 people, including children. Authorities said the incident was believed to be an attack.
At least two people were left fighting for their lives after the Mini Cooper was driven into a protest organised by trade union Verdi, attended by an estimated 2,500 strikers and supporters, including family members.
Detectives raided the home of the suspect, a 24-year-old Afghan asylum-seeker, who is being questioned.
The general prosecutor’s office in Munich has identified him as Farhad Noori, according to the Reuters news agency. Born in Kabul in 2001, he first arrived in Germany from Afghanistan at the end of 2016, Der Spiegel reported.
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Bavarian interior minister Joachim Herrmann said his asylum application had been rejected, but he had not been forced to leave due to security concerns in Afghanistan.
A series of attacks involving immigrants in recent months have pushed migration to the forefront of the campaign for Germany's 23 February election.
The attack took place about a mile away from the venue of the Munich Security Conference which begins on Friday, with US vice-president JD Vance and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky due to arrive in the city on Thursday.
Did you witness the incident or do you know anyone who did? Contact alex.croft@independent.co.uk
Police fired a shot at the car after it weaved between the police vehicles tailing the demonstration and drove into the crowd. Witnesses told of hearing an “engine roar” and “wheels spinning”, with images showing dozens of police surrounding a smashed-up Mini Cooper as debris was strewn across the street in the wake of the crash.
German chancellor Olaf Scholz said “the perpetrator must be punished and he must leave the country”.
Bavarian governor Markus Soder said the incident was “suspected to be an attack”. Investigations are being carried out by the Bavarian Central Office for Combating Extremism and Terrorism, state minister Georg Eisenreich added.
Although eyewitnesses told Bild that two men were seen in the Mini, police said they “cannot confirm” whether more than one person was involved.
Click here to follow the latest updates on the Munich car attack
Udo Kunte told Merkur, a local newspaper: “Suddenly there was an engine roar behind us, wheels spinning and then there was just a clattering.”
Another demonstrator told Bayerischer Rundfunk, a Munich-based public radio station: "I was in the demonstration and saw that a man was lying under the car. Then I tried to open the door, but it was locked."
Munich's mayor Dieter Reiter told Bild: "The police chief has just informed me that a vehicle drove into a group of people and unfortunately many people were injured, including children. I am deeply shocked. My thoughts are with the injured."
The alleged attacker was already known to police for drug-related offences and shoplifting, Bavarian interior minister Joachim Herrmann told reporters.
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Verdi, Germany’s second largest trade union with around 1.9 million members, had called a strike for childcare workers to call for better wages and working conditions.
Frank Werneke, the union’s chair, told The Independent in a statement that they are “deeply dismayed and shocked” by the incident. “This is a difficult moment for all colleagues. We unions stand for solidarity, especially in such a dark hour.”
The strike had been called after employers failed to submit a final offer in January negotiations. The union promised to “noticeably increase the pressure until the second round of negotiations on February 17th and 18th”.
Journalist Sandra Demmelhuber wrote in a post on X: “A person was lying on the street and a young man was taken away by the police. People were sitting on the ground, crying and shaking. Details still unclear.”
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Traffic disruptions are expected around the scene and police have asked people to avoid the area so emergency services can carry out their work.
Authorities set up a collection point for witness statements and a care centre for those psychologically impacted by the suspected attack.
Just three weeks ago, a two-year-old boy and a man were killed in a knife attack in Aschaffenburg, also in Bavaria.
An Afghan whose asylum application was rejected was the suspect in that attack, which propelled migration to the centre of the German election campaign.
The Aschaffenburg attack followed knife attacks in Mannheim and in Solingen last year in which the suspects were immigrants from Afghanistan and Syria, respectively – in the latter case, also a rejected asylum seeker who was supposed to have left the country.
In the December Christmas market car ramming in Magdeburg, the suspect was a Saudi doctor who previously had come to various regional authorities' attention.