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One dead and three injured in knife attack at train station near Munich One dead, three injured in knife attack at train station near Munich
(35 minutes later)
One person has died and three others have been injured after a man launched a knife attack at a train station in southern Germany that prosecutors said had “an apparent Islamist motive”.One person has died and three others have been injured after a man launched a knife attack at a train station in southern Germany that prosecutors said had “an apparent Islamist motive”.
Police arrested the suspected attacker after he was overpowered at the railway station in Grafing, 25 miles south-east of central Munich.Police arrested the suspected attacker after he was overpowered at the railway station in Grafing, 25 miles south-east of central Munich.
Prosecutors said the person who died was a 50-year-old from the town of Wasserburg.Prosecutors said the person who died was a 50-year-old from the town of Wasserburg.
A spokesman for the Bavarian prosecutors’ office said the suspect was a 27-year-old German “who made remarks at the scene of the crime that indicate a political motive – apparently an Islamist motive”.A spokesman for the Bavarian prosecutors’ office said the suspect was a 27-year-old German “who made remarks at the scene of the crime that indicate a political motive – apparently an Islamist motive”.
“We are still determining what the exact remarks were,” the spokesman said. “We are still determining what the exact remarks were,” the spokesman added.
Police said that according to the first, unverified eyewitness accounts, the suspect shouted “Allahu akbar” (“God is greatest”) during the attack. Police said that according to unverified witness accounts, the suspect shouted “Allahu akbar” (“God is greatest”) during the attack, which happened at about 5am local time (3am GMT).
Ein Schwerverletzter Hat Messerstecherangriff von #Grafing islamistischen Hintergrund?: https://t.co/tPgW7xi4rn pic.twitter.com/esaVgXjSp9 The prosecutors’ office has launched a criminal investigation and denied initial reports it had imposed a news blackout. The railway station was cordoned off by police leading to restrictions on Munich’s S-Bahn rail network.
The prosecutors’ office has started a criminal investigation and denied initial reports it had imposed a news blackout. The railway station has been cordoned off by police leading to restrictions on Munich’s S-Bahn rail network. Angelika Obermayr, the mayor of Grafing, described it as “an absolutely peaceful little Bavarian town”. “Something like this is absolutely new and shakes people deeply,” she said, adding: “That it could happen here is absolutely stupefying.”
Germany, which is playing a supporting role in the fight against Islamic State, has not suffered the kind of major attack by Islamist militants experienced by neighbouring France and Belgium. Germany, which is playing a supporting role in the fight against Islamic State, has not suffered the kind of major attack by Islamist militants experienced by neighbouring France and Belgium. But ministers have repeatedly warned an attack is possible and German security services are on alert.
Over 800 home-grown radicals have left Germany to join jihadi groups in Syria and Iraq and about 260 have returned.
Germany has also been a transit country for militants who carried out attacks in Belgium this year and Paris last year.