Articles by "Germany"
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts


FRANKFURT, Germany – Explosives experts on Sunday defused a large World War II aerial bomb in the southern German city of Augsburg — clearing the way for thousands of evacuated residents to return to their Christmas celebrations at home.


City police tweeted that they had "good news at Christmas" just before 7 p.m. local time (1 p.m. ET) Sunday. They had earlier been unable to say how long residents would have to stay away.

Some 32,000 households with 54,000 residents in the city's historic central district were forced to leave by 10 a.m. Christmas morning so experts could handle the bomb.

They had to clean seven decades of muck off the bomb so they could find and disable its three detonators. The munition's large size — 1.8 tons — suggested it was a so-called blockbuster of the type dropped by British forces, with the aim of blowing surrounding buildings apart so that accompanying incendiary bombs could start fires more easily.

The bomb was uncovered last week during construction work in the city's historic central district. Police said Christmas Day was the best time to defuse it because there was less traffic and it was more likely that people could stay with relatives.

Police rang doorbells and used vans with loudspeakers to urge procrastinators to leave ahead of a 10 a.m. deadline. Schools and sports facilities were opened as shelters but most people appeared to have left on Christmas Eve. Finding World War II bombs is not unusual in Germany. Much of Augsburg's historic center was destroyed on Feb. 25-26, 1944, when hundreds of British and U.S. bombers attacked the city.
The fugitive suspected of driving a truck into a crowded Berlin Christmas market on Monday was on the radar of German authorities as far back as June, when they tried - and failed - to deport him after learning he was plotting a "serious act of violent subversion," a German official told The Washington Post. Further, security agencies exchanged info as recently as November that allegedly tied Anis Amri to Islamist militants, yet the Tunisian-born 24-year-old was able to evade terror investigators in the lead-up to Monday's ISIS-claimed massacre, which killed 12 and wounded 48.
Authorities released two new images of Anis Amri, the suspect in Monday's attack in Berlin. (German police) Berlin prosecutors told The Associated Press in a statement Wednesday that they first launched an investigation against Amri on March 14 followed a tip from federal security agencies. The tip warned that Amri might be planning a break-in to finance the purchase of automatic weapons for use in an attack. Surveillance showed that Amri was involved in drug dealing in a Berlin park and involved in a bar brawl, but there was no evidence to substantiate the original warning and the observation was called off in September. German police said Amri's wallet and identification papers were found in the cab of the truck used in the terror attack, however, authorities didn't name Amri as a suspect until Wednesday morning and first arrested two other men -- who were subsequently released due to a lack of evidence. Amri is believed to have multiple aliases and is said to be armed and dangerous. Officials have offered a 100,000-euro reward for information leading to Amri's capture. German police released two images of the suspect police believe is responsible for Monday's truck attack. (AP) Authorities have yet to recover a gun they say was used in Monday's attack. Police believe Amri beat and shot a Polish truck driver to death before using his vehicle to ram the market crowd. "We don't know for sure whether it was one or several perpetrators," said Germany's top prosecutor, Peter Frank. "We don't know for sure whether he, or they, had support." DUTCH POLITICIAN: MERKEL HAS BLOOD ON HER HANDS AFTER BERLIN Amri reportedly has extensive links to militant Islam. He arrived in Germany in July 2015 as an asylum-seeker and was considered part of the "Salafist-Islamist scene" by authorities. Amri spent some time in pre-deportation detention in Germany after his asylum application was rejected in June 2016, said Stephan Mayer, a senior lawmaker with Germany's governing conservatives. But North Rhine Westphalia Interior Minister Ralf Jager told The Washington Post that Tunisia initially denied he was a citizen of the country and then delayed the issuance of his passport -- which only arrived Wednesday, two days after the Berlin attack. Amri was registered in an asylum-seekers' hostel, however, he was known to move around often, Der Spiegel reported. At some point earlier this year, authorities classified Amri as a "potential threat." He was a follower of the recently arrested Abu Walaa, an Iraqi citizen and preacher who was believed to be one of the top ISIS leaders in Germany, according to Suddeutsche Zeitung. Die Welt reported that Amri had stayed with another suspected Islamist in Germany and had recently sought to obtain weapons. German officials were reportedly monitoring his communications. As part of the manhunt, German authorities have been scouring hospitals after reportedly finding Amri's DNA inside the truck and concluding he likely sustained an injury during the Christmas market attack. Some police raids had been delayed or cancelled due to administrative errors, Die Welt reported. Prior to arriving in Germany, Amri spent four years in an Italian prison for burning a school, Reuters reported, citing a Tunisia radio interview with his father and security sources. Amri was also reportedly convicted in absentia for aggravated theft with violen
BERLIN – German investigators were searching Wednesday for the killer or killers in Monday's attack on a crowded Berlin Christmas market after a man arrested soon after the rampage was released for lack of evidence and the Islamic State group claimed responsibility. Police in Berlin said they had received 508 tips on the attack as of Tuesday night, but it wasn't clear whether prosecutors had any concrete leads. The attack on the market next to the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church in the center of the capital left 12 dead and 48 injured. Shortly afterward, a Pakistani man who had come to Germany as an asylum-seeker was detained based on a description from witnesses of a suspect who jumped from the truck and fled. However, the Pakistani man was freed Tuesday after prosecutors couldn't find evidence tying him to the attack. The claim of responsibility carried on IS's Amaq news agency on Tuesday described the man seen fleeing from the truck as "a soldier of the Islamic State" who "carried out the attack in response to calls for targeting citizens of the Crusader coalition." Germany's top prosecutor, Peter Frank, told reporters before the claim that the attack was reminiscent of July's deadly truck rampage in Nice and appeared to follow instructions published by IS.