The German government, under fire for failing to prevent a deadly car-ramming attack on a Christmas market, said Monday that the tragedy would have been hard to prevent and said that the suspect appeared to be mentally disturbed.
Interior Minister Nancy Faeser along with security and intelligence chiefs faced questioning by a parliamentary committee about the attack that killed five people and wounded more than 200, and on whether there had been missed clues and security lapses.
Faeser said no motive had yet been established for the Dec. 20 attack in the eastern city of Magdeburg, where a Saudi-born doctor who had lived in Germany for years was arrested, but she said “there are striking signs of a pathological psyche.”
She added that lessons must be learned about how to track potential attackers who don’t fit conventional threat categories and who “are psychologically disturbed and… driven by confused conspiracy theories.”
The minister argued that “such attackers do not fit any threat profile” — such as far-right extremist or Islamist — and warned that German security services will need “other indicators and action plans” to deal with them in future.
The suspect, referred to as Taleb A. by German officials, has been identified by BBC News and the AFP news agency as Taleb al-Abdulmohsen. He came to Germany in 2006 and was granted refugee status 10 years later.
Police arrested him at the scene of the attack in which a motor vehicle was used as a weapon — a method previously used in jihadist attacks.
In 2016, an Islamic extremist plowed through a crowded Christmas market in Berlin with a truck, killing 13 people and injuring dozens more. The attacker was killed in a shootout days later. That same year, ISIS claimed responsibility after another attacker killed 86 people in a truck rampage in the French city of Nice.
Abdulmohsen, by contrast, has in the past voiced strongly anti-Islam views and sympathies with the far right in his social media posts, as well as anger at Germany for allowing in too many Muslim war refugees and other asylum-seekers.
Faeser said there were “tens of thousands of tweets” the suspect had posted over the years that were yet to be fully examined.
“That explains why not everything is on the table yet,” she said. “Who knew about which clues and what was passed on when must be carefully clarified.”
Reuters reported that he posted rambling commentary on X, among other things blaming Germany’s supposed liberalism for the death of the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates, and accusing police of stealing a USB stick from him and destroying a criminal complaint he had filed.
Abdulmohsen, 50, is the only suspect in the attack in which a rented BMW sport utility vehicle plowed through the crowd of revelers at high speed, leaving a bloody trail of carnage.
He has been remanded in custody on five counts of murder and 205 counts of attempted murder, prosecutors said, but so far not on terrorism-related charges.
The state premier of Saxony-Anhalt, Reiner Haseloff, described it at the time as “a lone attack.”
According to media reports citing unnamed German security sources, the suspect had in the past been treated for mental illness and tested positive for drug use on the night of his arrest. German media investigations of Abdulmohsen’s past and his social media postings have found expressions of anger and frustration, and threats of violence against German citizens and politicians.
German police have said they had contacted Abdulmohsen in September 2023 and October 2024, and then repeatedly tried but failed to meet with him again in December.
According to Reuters, Holger Muench, president of the federal criminal police office (BKA), said Abdulmohsen “made insults and even threats. But he was not known for acts of violence.”
Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who faces a general election in February, told the news site T-online that officials would “examine very carefully whether there were any failings on the part of the authorities” and whether any clues were missed in the run-up to the attack.
Saudi Arabia said it had repeatedly warned Germany about Abdulmohsen, but according to Reuters, police said they found the accusations too vague.
Ahead of February’s election, the Christmas market bloodshed has reignited heated debate about immigration and security, after deadly knife attacks this year blamed on Islamist extremists.
After Monday’s hearing, lawmaker Konstantin Kuhle of the liberal Free Democrats said “the federal and state authorities knew this perpetrator.” But Kuhle said no authority had connected all the dots and that “we do not have a complete list of all contacts with the authorities as of today.”
Faeser said that having a fuller picture of all the data would have been good but would likely “not have prevented” the attack.
Lawmaker Gottfried Curio of the far-right and anti-immigration Alternative for Germany party was most scathing in his criticism.
“Everything was foreseeable for everyone,” he charged. “We have hundreds of dangerous people in this country, we let them run around.
“What we need are deportations, instead we get naturalisations. What is needed now is a change in security policy in this country.”
www.cbsnews.com