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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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Berlin terror attack: Twelve dead and 48 injured as truck ploughs into crowd at Christmas market

20 December 2016 • 2:03am


Watch | Live: Aftermath of Berlin Market where truck ran into crowds

20 December 2016 • 2:03am
  • 12 dead and 48 injured, some severely, at Berlin market
  • Suspect arrested at Victory Column, co-driver dead
  • Co-driver Polish national, suspected driver's nationality unclear
  • Police indicate incident is likely to be terror related
  • NY Post: Isil have claimed responsibility
  • Attack occurred at Breitscheidplatz, outside the landmark Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church


At least twelve people were killed and 48 were injured, some seriously, after the vehicle mounted the pavement at about 40mph and crashed into them.

The driver, whose nationality is unknown, was reported to have fled but was later said to have been arrested by police. A passenger in the lorry – which came from Poland and may have been hijacked – was later found dead inside. It is believed he may have been the original driver of the truck. German authorities confirmed that the passenger was a police national.

Police said the incident – which echoed an attack in Nice in July this year where 86 people were killed by a truck driven by a terrorist inspired by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) – appeared to be deliberate. On Monday night they warned local residents to stay indoors.

The crash was labelled as an apparent "terrorist attack" by the White House. National Security spokesman Ned Price said the US condemned the events "in the strongest terms".


Watch | Shocking aftermath of Berlin christmas market ploughed by lorry 00:57

Officials were said to be investigating the crash as a terrorist act, according to a German intelligence source, CNN reported on Monday night.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, expressed her sympathy for the victims of the incident.

Germany was put on high alert for a major terror attack in the months after Mrs Merkel opened the country’s borders to more than one million refugees from the Middle East.

Within minutes of last night’s incident, far-Right politicians were criticised for exploiting the attack to suggest that Germany’s generosity had allowed extremists into the country.

The carnage came just hours after the Russian ambassador to Turkey had been shot dead in the Turkish capital Ankara by a policeman who claimed to be taking revenge for Moscow’s involvement in the battle for Aleppo.

And it followed warnings that Isil terrorists may target Christmas markets in Europe.


Watch | Berlin market eyewitness: "It was far too reminiscent of Nice" 01:26

Witnesses of the Berlin attack described scenes of panic and horror as a lorry veered off the street and ploughed into the crowded Christmas market just off the famous shopping street of Kurfürstendamm at around 8pm local time (7pm GMT).

Emma Rushton, a tourist, told CNN: “We were enjoying the Christmas lights and mulled wine. We were ready to get up when we heard a loud bang, To our left we saw Christmas lights torn down and the top of an articulated lorry crashing through the stalls and through people.

“We wanted to get out as soon as possible. We wanted to get to a safe place. In my opinion, it was going at 40mph, there was no sign it was slowing down. It did not feel like an accident. There was no way it could have come off like an accident, it was through the middle of the market. The stall where mulled wine was being served was crushed. I saw people bleeding, lying in the pavement.”



Mike Fox, who was visiting Berlin from Birmingham, said the lorry missed him by around three yards.

“It was definitely deliberate,” he said. He added that he helped people who appeared to have broken limbs, and that others were trapped under Christmas stands.

Crushed stalls were left in the remains of the Christmas market last night, in the shadow of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, which is preserved in ruins from Second World War bombing.

Other witnesses described bystanders rushing to the aid of the injured in the immediate aftermath of the attack. Many of the injured were said to be in a life-threatening condition last night.

Witnesses described the driver of the lorry as “Eastern European” in appearance.

The truck, which had Polish number plates, belonged to a Polish delivery company.

The company said the vehicle, which was loaded with steel beams, had left Poland for Berlin earlier in the day but that contact with the driver was lost at around 4pm local time (3pm GMT) and the firm believed the lorry may have been hijacked.



Ariel Zurawski, the owner of the vehicle, told Polish television his cousin had initially been driving the truck, but he believed it had been hijacked.

“I can say, hand on heart, that the man who drove into those people in the centre of Berlin was not my driver,” Mr Zurawksi said.

“This is my cousin. I’ve known him since birth. I have faith in him, this is not the man I know, they have done something to him.” He said he believed the dead man found inside the cab of the lorry was his cousin.

Berlin police said they suspected the truck was stolen from a construction site in Poland. There were unconfirmed reports in the German press last night that the alleged truck driver had arrived in the country this year as a refugee from Pakistan.

There has long been concern in Germany that the country’s traditional Christmas markets could be a target for a terror attack. German intelligence picked up several indications of an imminent attack on a market in the days leading up to the attack, according to Die Welt newspaper.

The attack took place at 8pm (7pm GMT) last night, when the market was thronged with Christmas shoppers and people stopping off for a mug of Glühwein or mulled wine on their way home. The Breitscheidplatz market, where the attack took place, is particularly vulnerable as it is situated on a pedestrian island between two busy thoroughfares.

Witnesses said the truck had approached from Budapester Strasse, to the north of the market, before veering into the stalls without slowing.

“With the apparent attack on the Christmas market in Berlin, our worst fears have come true,” Stephan Mayer of Mrs Merkel’s Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), said.

“Now the security concepts at all the Christmas markets in Germany have to be examined — including the question of whether they can still take place at all.”

Since Nice, security experts have warned that it is largely impossible to protect people against this style of attack, in which a lorry is driven into a crowd.

Attention will now focus on the identity of the perpetrators. Any indication that they may have been asylum-seekers will heap pressure on Mrs Merkel over her controversial “open door” refugee policy, under which more than one million migrants entered Germany last year.

Ariel Zurawski, the owner of the vehicle, told Polish television his cousin had been driving the vehicle, which had stopped off in Berlin on its way back from Italy with a consignment of steel.

Mr Zurawski said the driver’s wife had spoken to him around 4pm, but had been unable to reach him later.

“I can say hand on heart that the man who drove into those people in the centre of Berlin was not my driver,” Mr Zurawksi said.

“This is my cousin. I’ve known him since birth. I have faith in him, this is not the man I know, they have done something to him.”

Mr Zurawski later said he believed the dead man found inside the cab of the lorry was his cousin.

"My wife told me they had found a body in the cab. From what they say it could be my driver. My cousin,” he said. “Please forgive me but I can't talk any more now."

There has long been concern in Germany that the country’s traditional Christmas markets could be a target for a terror attack. German intelligence picked up several indications of an imminent attack on a market in the days leading up to the attack, according to Die Welt newspaper.

Mrs Merkel has distanced herself from the policy in recent months, and promised it will never be repeated, after her party suffered damaging losses in regional elections and with general elections looming next year.

2:03AM
Man in passenger seat is Polish national, police confirm

The passenger who died in the lorry was a Polish national, Berlin police said on Twitter in the early hours of Tuesday.

Police have not identified the man nor give any other details.

Ariel Zurawski, the Polish owner of the lorry, said earlier that he feared the vehicle may have been hijacked.

Mr Zurawski told Polish television that his cousin, who is 37-year-old, had initially been driving the truck, but he believed it had been hijacked.

“I can say, hand on heart, that the man who drove into those people in the centre of Berlin was not my driver,” Mr Zurawksi said.

“This is my cousin. I’ve known him since birth. I have faith in him, this is not the man I know, they have done something to him.”

He said he believed the dead man found inside the cab of the lorry was his cousin.


1:02AM
Berlin police raise death toll to 12


erlin police have raised the death toll to 12 with 48 injured in the early hours of Tuesday adding that some of the injured are in severe condition.

Police had previously reported that 9 people had died and at least 50 were injured in the incident.

12:35AM
Driver said to be "refugee from Pakistan" - unconfirmed reports

nconfirmed reports in the German press on Monday night claimed that the driver of the truck had arrived in the country this year as a refugee from Pakistan.

German newspaper "Die Welt" reported sources saying that the suspected driver is a Pakistani refugee who arrived in the country on February 16, 2016.

The newspaper, which had previously reported the nationality of the suspect to be Chechen, quoted the Tagesspiegel reporting that the person arrested in connection to the incident was known to police for minor criminal offences unrelated to terrorism.

Daily newspaper Tagesspiegel reported "security sources" saying that the person arrested was "Pakistani or Afghani". The report has not been confirmed.

11:49PM
Berlin police: Suspected that lorry was stolen

"It is suspected that the truck was stolen from a construction site in Poland. The investigations are still ongoing." Berlin police said on Monday night on Twitter.

he Polish owner of the lorry that ploughed into the market confirmed his driver was missing.

"We haven't heard from him since this afternoon. We don't know what happened to him. He's my cousin, I've known him since I was a kid. I can vouch for him," transport company owner Ariel Zurawski told AFP.

The company's transport manager, Lukasz Wasik, said the driver is 37 years old and had been transporting Thyssen steel products from Italy to Berlin.

"The company where he was supposed to unload the products in Berlin was not able to receive them and told him to return on Tuesday morning. They told him to wait in Berlin somewhere," Wasik told AFP.

"We lost contact with him around 3:00 pm local time (1400 GMT). We don't know what happened - whether he was taken hostage, killed. We know nothing. We're very worried about him."

"What a tragedy," he added.

11:45PM
Eyewitness describes Berlin Christmas market incident

yewitness Emma Rushton describes seeing the truck that rammed through a crowded Christmas market in central Berlin, killing at least nine people.


Watch | Berlin market eyewitness: "It was far too reminiscent of Nice" 01:26

11:34PM
Berlin police: 45 wounded taken to hospital

he rescue operation at the incident site has terminated, Berlin police said on Twitter.

Police say that 45 people have been taken to hospital.

11:29PM
Donald Trump blames 'Islamist terrorists' for 'slaughter' of Christians in Berlin

S president-elect Donald Trump has blamed 'Islamist terrorists' for 'slaughter' of Christians in Berlin in a statement released late on Monday.

The White House and Italian foreign minister have referred to the market incident as an "attack" while German authorities have refrained from using the term to describe the events so far.

"ISIS and other Islamist terrorists continually slaughter Christians in their communities and places of worship as part of their global jihad," Mr Trump said in the statement, using an acronym for Islamic State or Isil.
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